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1830s births

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Sitting Bull
Hunkpapa Lakota medicine man and holy man (1831–1890)
Władysław Tarnowski
Polish composer (1836–1878)
Felice Beato
Italian-British photographer (1832–1909)
Samori Ture
African warlord and religious leader, founder of the Wassoulou Empire (1830–1900)
Tippu Tip
Swahili slave and ivory trader (c. 1832/7–1905)
Paul du Chaillu
French-American anthropologist, zoologist and traveler
Francis Marrash
Syrian writer and poet (1836–1874)
Lyuben Karavelov
Bulgarian writer (1834–1879)
Piet Joubert
South African politician and general (1834–1900)
Majid bin Said Al Busaidi
Sultan of Zanzibar (1834-1870)
Rahime Perestu Sultan
First legal wife of Abdülmejid I and Valide Sultan of Abdülhamid II
Mubarak Al-Sabah
ruler of the Sheikhdom of Kuwait from 1896 to 1915
Amelia Dyer
British serial killer
Barghash bin Said Al Busaidi
Sultan of Zanzibar (1837–1888)
Hendrik Witbooi
National hero of Namibia
Rain-in-the-Face
Rain-in-the-Face (Lakota: Ité Omáǧažu in Standard Lakota Orthography) (c. 1835 – September 15, 1905) was a warchief of the Lakota tribe of Native Americans. His mother was a Dakota related to the band of famous Chief Inkpaduta. In 1876, he participated in the Battle of the Little Bighorn that defeated the 7th Cavalry Regiment under Lt. Colonel George Armstrong Custer.
Elizabeth Wolstenholme Elmy
English suffragist
Marc Delafontaine
Swiss chemist (1838-1911)
Muhammad Khudayar Khan
Khan of Kokand four times
Baba Anujka
Yugoslavian serial killer
Serfiraz Hanım
Wife of Ottoman Sultan Abdülmejid I
Eduard Hitzig
German neurologist (1838-1907)
Şayeste Hanım
Consort of Ottoman Sultan Abdülmejid I
Mustafa Riad Paşa
Egyptian statesman
Kintpuash
Kintpuash (c. 1837 – October 3, 1873), also known as Kientpoos, Keintpoos, or by his English name Captain Jack, was a prominent Modoc leader from present-day northern California and southern Oregon. His name in the Modoc language translates to "strikes the water brashly." Kintpuash is best known for leading his people in resisting forced relocation during the Modoc War of 1872–1873. Using the rugged terrain of the Lava Beds in California, his small band of warriors held off vastly superior US Army forces for several months. He remains the only Native American leader to be charged with war crim
Tomioka Tessai
Japanese artist (1837-1924)
al-Zubayr Rahma Mansur
Slave trader and Sudanese governor
Maria Beasley
American entrepreneur and inventor
Kate Warne
First female detective in the US (1833–1868)
Lucy Walker
English climber (1836-1916)
Mary Fields
first African-American female Star Route stagecoach delivery driver the United States
M'siri
thumb|250px|Msiri portrayed in an 1886 book.
Crowfoot
Crowfoot (or Isapo-Muxika ; syllabics: c. 1830 – 25 April 1890) was a chief of the Siksika. His father, (Packs a Knife), and mother, (Attacked Towards Home), were Kainai. He was five years old when was killed during a raid on the Crow tribe, and, a year later, his mother remarried to (Many Names) of the Siksika people among whom he was brought up. Crowfoot was a warrior who fought in as many as nineteen battles and sustained many injuries, but he tried to obtain peace instead of warfare. Crowfoot is well known for his involvement in Treaty Number 7 and did much negotiating for his people. Whil
Vanchinbalyn Injinash
Mongolian poet, novelist and historian (1837–1892)
Muteesa I of Buganda
King of Buganda (1837–1884)
José Casado del Alisal
Spanish painter (1832-1886)
Djoumbé Fatima
monarch (sultan/queen regnant) and regent of Mohéli (Mwali)
Ceylanyar Hanım
Consort of Ottoman sultan Abdulmejid I
Antonio Beato
Italian-British photographer
Muhammad bin Sabah Al-Sabah
Ruler of Kuwait from 1892 to 1896
Dabulamanzi kaMpande
Zulu commander and prince
Lev Kamenev
Russian landscape painter (1833–1886)
Usta Gambar Garabaghi
Azerbaijan painter (1830-1905)
Lerotholi
Lerotholi Letsie (c. 1836–1905) was the paramount chief of Basotho (modern Lesotho) from November 20, 1891 to August 19, 1905. Letsie is one of the chiefs whom led the 1880 Basotho gun war which ended in basotho victory and independence for Lesotho.
Sarah Boone
American inventor (1878–1904)
Daniel Chonkadze
Georgian writer (1830–1860)
Khama III
Kgosi of Bechuanaland
Maʾ al-ʿAynayn
Mauritanian religious leader (1831-1910)
Bahar Shirvani
poet
Alimqul
Alimqul (also spelt Alymkul, Alim quli, Alim kuli) (ca. 1833–1865) was a warlord in the Kokand Khanate, and its de facto ruler from 1863 to 1865.
Touch the Clouds
American tribal chief
Marietta Stow
American politician (1837-1902)
Tasunka Kokipapi
Oglala Lakota chief leader
Heinrich de Ahna
Austrian violinist (1835–1892)
Taqulittuq
thumb|Taqulittuq in the United States Taqulittuq (, often transliterated as Tookoolito;  – December 31, 1876) was an Inuk interpreter and guide. She and her husband Ipirvik (also known as Joe) worked alongside Arctic explorer Charles Francis Hall and joined him in his search for Franklin's lost expedition in the 1860s, as well as the Polaris expedition to reach the North Pole.
Frances Clayton
Was an American woman who disguised herself as a man to fight for the Union Army in the American Civil War
Richard Pankhurst
British politician (1834–1898)
Chen Yucheng
Chinese revolutionary and officer (1837-1862)
Leatherman
famous American vagabond of unknown and disputed identity
Piotr Petrovitch Veretschagin
Russian painter (1834-1886)