Kenzaburo Ōe, Japan, Literature (1994)
for "for creating an imagined world, where life and myth condense to form a disconcerting picture of the human predicament today"
Wolfgang Pauli
Pauli received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his "decisive contribution through his discovery of a new law of Nature, the exclusion principle or Pauli principle".
Ludwig Quidde (March 23, 1858, Bremen – March 4, 1941) was a German politician and pacifist who is mainly remembered today for his acerbic criticism of German Emperor Wilhelm II. Quidde's long career spanned four different eras of German history: that of Bismarck (up to 1890); the Hohenzollern Empire under Wilhelm II (1888–1918); the Weimar Republic (1918–1933); and, finally, Nazi Germany. In 1927, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_Quidde)
Tadeusz Reichstein, /
Physiology or Medicine (1950, together with Edward Calvin Kendall and Philip Showalter Hench) "for their discoveries relating to the hormones of the adrenal cortex, their structure and biological effects"
George Wald (United States)
Physiology/Medicine (1967) - together with Ragnar Granit and Haldan Keffer Hartline "for their discoveries concerning the primary physiological and chemical visual processes in the eye"
Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo, East Timor
Along with José Ramos-Horta, he received the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize for work "towards a just and peaceful solution to the conflict in East Timor."
Pieter Zeeman was a Dutch physicist who shared the 1902 Nobel Prize in Physics with Hendrik Lorentz for his discovery of the Zeeman effect, the splitting of a spectrum line into several components by the application of a magnetic field.