INVENTOR

Didi Senft

1952 - Today

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Dieter "Didi" Senft (born 7 February 1952) is a German cycling fan who is known as Didi the Devil or El Diablo at the Tour de France and Giro d'Italia. Since 1993, he has been seen in the Tour and Giro's many stages wearing his red devil costume and painting trident symbols on the road some miles before he appears. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Didi Senft is the 320th most popular inventor (up from 345th in 2019), the 4,474th most popular biography from Germany (up from 4,790th in 2019) and the 40th most popular German Inventor.

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Among INVENTORS

Among inventors, Didi Senft ranks 320 out of 426Before him are Rostislav Alexeyev, Kenjiro Takayanagi, Almon Brown Strowger, Walter Bruch, John Shepherd-Barron, and Nils Bohlin. After him are Alexander P. de Seversky, George Devol, Ottmar Mergenthaler, Jacob Ellehammer, Jozef Murgaš, and Georges Beuchat.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1952, Didi Senft ranks 355Before him are Shelley McNamara, Karen Shakhnazarov, John Finn, Siegfried Stohr, Jiří Paroubek, and Alexis Argüello. After him are Sylvie Kinigi, Jose Advincula, Norbert Haug, Karin Büttner-Janz, Vladimir Gusinsky, and Abel Braga.

Others Born in 1952

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In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Didi Senft ranks 4,477 out of 7,253Before him are Alfred Keller (1882), Wolf Kahler (1940), Wilhelm Camphausen (1818), Albert Ladenburg (1842), Louise Otto-Peters (1819), and Heinrich Schomburgk (1885). After him are Angela Gossow (1974), Bruno Frank (1887), Carl Ludwig Christian Rümker (1788), Helmut Käutner (1908), Heinrich XIII Prinz Reuss (1951), and Jean Gilbert (1879).

Among INVENTORS In Germany

Among inventors born in Germany, Didi Senft ranks 40Before him are Ricardo Wolf (1887), Eugen Langen (1833), Adolf Martens (1850), Franz Xaver Gabelsberger (1789), Wilhelm Bauer (1822), and Walter Bruch (1908). After him are Ottmar Mergenthaler (1854), Heinrich Gerber (1832), Albrecht Berblinger (1770), Andy Bechtolsheim (1955), and Karl Jatho (1873).