- male, deceased (972)
- Liutprand (also Liudprand, Luitprand; c. 922 - 972) was a Lombard historian and author, and bishop of Cremona. He was born towards the beginning of...
- male, deceased (1187)
- Gerard of Cremona (Italian: Gerardo da Cremona; Latin: Gerardus Cremonensis; c. 1114 - 1187), was an Italian translator of Arabic scientific works....
- male, 63 years old
- Mgr Paul Cremona O.P. (in Maltese: Monsinjur Pawlu Cremona), (born January 25, 1946 in Valletta, Malta) is the 11th and current Archbishop of...
- male, deceased (1903)
- Luigi Cremona (7 December 1830- 10 June 1903) was an Italian mathematician. His life was devoted to the study of geometry and reforming advanced...
- male, deceased (1259)
- Roland of Cremona (1178-1259) was a Dominican theologian. He joined the Dominican order at Bologna in 1219. He was a lecturer at the medieval...
- deceased (560)
- Himerius (Imier, Imerio) of Cremona (d. June 17, ca. 560), also known as Himerius of Amelia, was an Italian bishop. He is venerated as a saint by...
- male, deceased (1390)
- Simon of Cremona (d. in Padua, 1390) was a writer and well-known preacher of the Augustinian Order. He worked during the late fourteenth century in...
- male, deceased (1684)
- Niccolò Amati was an Italian luthier in Cremona. The founder of the Cremona school was Andrea Amati (c.1520–c.1578), whose earliest violins date fro...
- male
- Amati is the name of a family of Italian violin makers, who flourished at Cremona from about 1549 to 1740.
- male
- Jacob Stainer (c. 1617-1683) is the earliest and most important Austrian luthier. Stainer was born in Absam, Austria, into a family of stringed...
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