List of Leipzig University people
The following is a list of notable alumni and faculty of the University of Leipzig.
Notable alumni

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- Theodore Dyke Acland, English physician
 - Georgius Agricola, Saxon mining engineer and natural philosopher
 - Joseph L. Armstrong, American scholar
 - Jan Niecisław Baudouin de Courtenay, Polish linguist and slavist
 - Kamuran Alî Bedirxan, Kurdish politician and writer
 - Lothar Bisky, German politician
 - Felix Bloch, Swiss physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics
 - Marc Bloch, French historian
 - John Bohnius, German physician
 - Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen, American writer and scholar
 - Tycho Brahe, Danish astronomer
 - Sylvia Bretschneider (1960-2019), politician, member and speaker of the state assembly (Landtag) of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
 - Selig Brodetsky, President of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
 - Cai Yuanpei, Chinese linguist
 - James McKeen Cattell, American psychologist
 - Wei-Liang Chow, Chinese mathematician and stamp collector born in Shanghai, known for his work in algebraic geometry.
 - Constantine I, Greek monarch
 - William David Coolidge, American physicist
 - Karl Ludwig Drobisch (1803–1854), German composer, music theorist and church musician
 - Georg Dohrn, German conductor
 - Carl H. Dorner, American politician
 - Ernst Christoph Dressler, German composer and music theorist
 - Émile Durkheim, French sociologist
 - Friedrich Adolf Ebert, Saxon librarian
 - Nishith Gupta, molecular biologist
 - Johann Arnold Ebert, Saxon writer and translator
 - Wilhelm Ehmann, musicologist, conductor, founder and director of the Herford School of Church Music
 - Ephraim Emerton, American medievalist historian
 - John O. Evjen, American theologian and church historian
 - Gustav Fechner, German psychologist
 - Wilhelm Fuchs (1898–1947), Nazi SS officer and Holocaust perpetrator executed for war crimes
 - Arnold Gehlen, German philosopher and sociologist
 - Hans-Dietrich Genscher, German politician
 - Kurt Albert Gerlach, German sociologist
 - Johann Wolfgang Goethe, German poet
 - Woldemar Ludwig Grenser, German obstetrician
 - Otto von Guericke, German scientist and politician
 - Gotthard Günther, German-American philosopher
 - Samuel Hahnemann, founder of homeopathy
 - Edith Hamilton, American essayist and educator; first female student at the university together with her sister Alice
 - Albert Hauck, German theologian and church historian
 - Elsa Herrmann (1893–1957), Jewish German feminist writer and refugee advocate
 - Johann Adam Hiller, Saxon composer
 - Milton W. Humphreys, American scholar
 - Adolf Hurwitz, German mathematician
 - Edmund Husserl, Austrian philosopher and mathematician
 - Ulrich von Hutten, Hessian humanist and political leader
 - Nicolae Iorga, Romanian historian and politician
 - Wolfgang Iser, German literary theorist
 - Jan Jesenius, Slovak physician, politician and philosopher
 - Tomas Garrigue Masaryk, founder and first president of Czechoslovakia, professor of sociology
 - Uwe Johnson, German writer and translator
 - Ernst Jünger, German novelist and nationalist activist
 - Erich Kähler, German mathematician
 - Erich Kästner, German satirist and children's writer
 - Paul Kirchhoff, German anthropologist and ethnohistorian
 - Johannes Knolleisen, German theologian
 - Alexander Kohut, Hungarian-American rabbi and orientalist
 - Ku Hung-ming, Malaysian-Chinese scholar
 - Victor Lange, German-American linguist
 - Georg Christian Lehms, German poet and novelist
 - Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, German mathematician and philosopher
 - August Leskien, German linguist
 - Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, German philosopher and writer
 - Rudolf Leuckart, German zoologist
 - Karl Liebknecht, German communist activist
 - Ulrike Liedtke (born 1958), musicologist and politician (SPD)
 - Lin Yutang, Chinese novelist and inventor
 - Virgil Madgearu, Romanian economist and sociologist
 - Bronisław Malinowski, Polish anthropologist
 - Sándor Márai, Hungarian poet and novelist
 - Emil Mattiesen (1875–1939), composer, pianist and philosopher
 - Thomas Mauksch, Lutheran pastor and naturalist
 - Angela Merkel, German politician
 - Walter Miller, American philologist
 - Thomas Müntzer, Thuringian theologian and rebellion leader
 - Mahoma Mwakipunda Mwaungulu, Malawian politician and freedom fighter
 - Carl Friedrich Naumann, German mineralogist and geologist
 - Friedrich Nietzsche, German philosopher
 - Novalis, German writer and philosopher
 - Otto Ohlendorf (1907–1951), SS general and Holocaust perpetrator, executed for war crimes
 - James Morris Page (1864–1936), American mathematician and chairman of University of Virginia
 - George Pardee, American physician and politician
 - Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, Romanian Marxist sociologist and politician
 - James Phelan, Jr., American politician
 - Samuel Pufendorf, German jurist and historian
 - Jeff Radebe African politician and cabinet member
 - Alexander Radishchev, Russian political thinker
 - Constantin Rădulescu-Motru, Romanian psychologist and philosopher
 - Hermann Raster, German-American journalist and political figure
 - Augustus Quirinus Rivinus (1827–1891), German botanist and physician
 - Ferdinand de Saussure, Swiss linguist
 - Hans Ulrich von Schaffgotsch, Silesian nobleman and general
 - Ludwig Scheeffer, German mathematician
 - Helmut Schelsky, German sociologist
 - Hans-Joachim Schulze, German Bach scholar
 - Kurt Schumacher, German politician
 - Robert Schumann (1810–1856), German Romantic composer
 - Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767), German Baroque composer
 - Christoph Graupner (1683-1760), German Baroque composer
 - Edward Teller, Hungarian-American nuclear physicist
 - Galsan Tschinag, Mongolian writer, poet and activist
 - Kārlis Ulmanis, Latvian politician
 - Dimitri Uznadze, Georgian psychologist
 - Richard Wagner (1813-1883), German Romantic composer
 - Ernst Heinrich Weber, German physician
 - Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker, German physicist and philosopher
 - Gustav Zeuner, German physicist and engineer
 - Caspar Ziegler, jurist
 
Notable faculty
- Ernst Bloch, philosopher
 - Felix Bloch, physicist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1952
 - Ludwig Boltzmann, Professor of Physics[1]
 - Karl Brugmann, comparative linguist
 - Karl Bücher, economist
 - Ernst Adolf Coccius, ophthalmologist
 - Peter Debye, physicist, 1927-1936 Director of the Physics Institute, winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1936
 - Adolf Ebert, Romance philologist
 - Gustav Fechner, psychologist
 - Paul Flechsig, neurologist
 - Hans Freyer, sociologist
 - Christian Fürchtegott Gellert, theologian and poet
 - Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert, publisher of the Annalen der Physik
 - Rudolf Gottschall, critic, poet and dramatist
 - Johann Christoph Gottsched, philologist
 - Samuel Hahnemann, physician and lecturer at medical faculty 1812-21
 - Werner Heisenberg, physicist, 1927–1942; Professor of Theoretical Physics; winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1932
 - Gustav Ludwig Hertz, physicist, 1954–1961; Head of the Physics Institute; winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1925, together with James Franck
 - Gert Jäger, Slavist and translation scholar; member of the Leipzig School
 - Otto Kade, specialist in Russian language and translation scholar; member of the Leipzig School
 - Felix Klein, mathematician
 - Werner Krauss, Romanist
 - Karl Lamprecht, historian
 - August Leskien, linguist
 - Julius Edgar Lilienfeld, inventor of the transistor
 - Wilhelm Maurenbrecher, historian
 - August Ferdinand Möbius, astronomer and mathematician
 - Theodor Mommsen, historian, 1848-1851 Professor of Law; Nobel Prize in Literature in 1902 for The History of Rome
 - Petrus Mosellanus, Greek scholar
 - Albrecht Neubert, lecturer in English language and translation scholar; member of the Leipzig School
 - Wilhelm Ostwald, chemist; 1887-1906 Chair of Physical Chemistry; Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1909
 - Svante Pääbo, Nobel Prize in Medicine, currently teaches molecular evolutionary biology at the university
 - Martin Petzoldt, systematic theology; president of the Neue Bachgesellschaft
 - Arthur Prüfer, musicologist
 - Augustus Quirinus Rivinus, botanist
 - Wilhelm Roscher, economist
 - Carl Victor Ryssel, theologian
 - Heinrich Simroth, zoologist
 - Nathan Söderblom, religious historian; Director of the Religious Studies Institute 1912–1914; Nobel Peace Prize in 1930
 - Georg Steindorff, egyptologist
 - Christian Thomasius, philosopher
 - Sin-Itiro Tomonaga, physicist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965
 - Wolfgang Unger, director of university music
 - Bartel Leendert van der Waerden, mathematician
 - Ernst Heinrich Weber, physician
 - Georg Wildführ, microbiologist
 - Peter Wollny, musicologist
 - Wilhelm Wundt, physician, psychologist
 - Paul Zweifel, physician, physiologist
 - Christian Wolff, a German philosopher
 
Universitätsmusikdirektor
Several persons held the official title of director of music at the university, some of them at the same time Thomaskantor, including:
- Friedrich Brandes
 - Werner Fabricius
 - Johann Gottlieb Görner
 - Hermann Grabner
 - Johann Georg Häser
 - Johann Adam Hiller (Thomaskantor 1789–1800)
 - Hermann Kretzschmar
 - Johann Kuhnau (Thomaskantor 1701–1722)
 - Hermann Langer
 - August Pohlenz
 - Max Pommer
 - Friedrich Rabenschlag
 - Max Reger
 - Ernst Friedrich Richter (Thomaskantor 1868–1879)
 - Hans-Joachim Rotzsch (Thomaskantor 1972–1991)
 - Johann Schelle (Thomaskantor 1677–1701)
 - Johann Gottfried Schicht (Thomaskantor 1811–1823)
 - Friedrich Schneider
 - Johann Philipp Christian Schulz
 - David Timm
 - Wolfgang Unger (Thomaskantor interim 1991–1992)
 - Heinrich Zöllner
 
References
- ^ Upon Boltzmann's resignation, Theodor des Coudres became his successor in the professorial chair at Leipzig.