Category
page 41925 deaths
Thomas Clifford Allbutt
British physician (1836–1925)
Julius Oscar Brefeld
German botanist and mycologist (1839–1925)
Christian Bartholomae
German linguist (1855–1925)
Princess Pauline of Waldeck and Pyrmont
Princess consort of Bentheim und Steinfurt (1855–1925)
Vitold Cerasky
Russian astronomer and scientist (1849-1925)
Ester Rachel Kamińska
Polish actress (1870–1925)
Osyp Makovei
Ukrainian poet, author and translator (1867-1925)
Wilhelm Körner
German chemist (1839-1925)
Mulai Ahmed er Raisuni
Moroccan rebel (1871-1925)
Henri Cordier
French linguist, historian, ethnographer, author, editor and Orientalist (1849–1925)
Xu Shuzheng
Chinese warlord (1880–1925)
René Thomas
French sport shooter (1865–1925)
Mary Thurman
American actress (1895–1925)
Hugo Bettauer
Austrian writer (1872–1925)
Alice Heine
second wife of Prince Albert I of Monaco (1858-1925)
Guy Rose
American artist (1867-1925)
Giacomo Boni
Italian archaeologist and architect (1859-1925)
Doveton Sturdee
Royal Navy admiral of the fleet (1859–1925)
Charles Lanrezac
French general (1852–1925)
Léon Augustin Lhermitte
painter from France (1844-1925)
John Newport Langley
British physiologist (1852-1925)
Juan Vucetich
Croatian-born Argentine police official, pioneer in fingerprint classification systems
Wilhelm Streitberg
German linguist (1864-1925)
Jacques Rivière
French writer (1886-1925)
William Wynn Westcott
English writer (1848–1925)
Frigga Carlberg
Swedish writer and suffragist (1851-1925)

Supayalat
Supayalat (, ; 13 December 1859 – 24 November 1925), also spelt Suphayalat, was the last queen of Burma who reigned in Mandalay (1878–1885), born to King Mindon Min and Queen of Alenandaw (; also known as Hsinbyumashin or Lady of the White Elephant). The British corruption of her name was "Soup Plate". She was married to her half-brother, Thibaw, who became the last king of the Konbaung dynasty in 1878, upon Mindon Min's death. She is best known for engineering a massacre of 80 to 100 royal family members, to prevent potential rivals from usurping Thibaw's power, although she had always denied
Adolf Wild von Hohenborn
German general (1860-1925)
Henry Rawlinson, 1st Baron Rawlinson
British soldier (1864-1925)
Carl Engler
German chemist (1842-1925)
Hasan al-Kharrat
leader of the Great Syrian Revolt against the French Mandate of Syria

Wilhelm Gericke
Austrian classical music conductor (1845–1925)
Hugo Hildebrand Hildebrandsson
Swedish meteorologist
Severo Fernández
President of Bolivia (1849–1925)
Ferdinand Löwe
Austrian musician (1865-1925)
Elwood Haynes
American inventor (1857–1925)
William Francis Hillebrand
United States chemist, U.S. Geological Survey (1853–1925)
J. Gordon Edwards
Canadian film and stage director, producer, stage actor and writer (1867–1925)
Conrad Brunkman
Swedish rower (1887-1925)

John Fillmore Hayford
American geodesist (1868-1925)

Friedrich von Hügel
Austrian Roman Catholic layman theologian (1852–1925)
Nikodim Kondakov
Russian art historian (1844–1925)
Carolina Michaëlis de Vasconcelos
German-Portuguese academic and art collector (1851–1925)
Giovanni Frattini
Italian mathematician (1852-1925)
Guido Menasci
Italian librettist (1867-1925)
José Ingenieros
Argentine philosopher (1877–1925)
Charles Allen Culberson
American politician (1855-1925)
Adele Bloch-Bauer
model for Gustav Klimt and art collector (1881-1925)
Faustino Míguez González
Spanish presbyter (1831-1925)

Jan Štursa
Czech sculptor (1880–1925)
Jan Veth
Dutch painter (1864–1925)
Jan Letzel
Czech architect (1880–1925)
Eduard von Gebhardt
Baltic German painter (1838-1925)
Louisa Aldrich-Blake
British surgeon and medical school dean
Maurice Lecoq
French sport shooter (1854–1925)
Rafaela Porras y Ayllón
cofounder of Handmaids of the Sacred Heart of Jesus
William Brymner
Canadian artist (1855-1925)
Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia
Prussian royal (1880-1925)
Eugène Goblet d'Alviella
Belgian lawyer and politician (1846-1925)
Albin Haller
French chemist (1849–1925)