Rubin is both a surname and a given name. Rubins is a Latvian-language name.It derives from the biblical name Reuben as a Jewish name.The choice is also influenced by the word rubin meaning "ruby," is some languages.[1]
Notable people with the name include:
Given name
- Rubin Carter, nicknamed "The Hurricane," was a boxer who was imprisoned and later absolved.
 - Rubin Goldmark
 - Rubin Kantorovich
 - Rubin Patiția
 
Surname
- Alan Rubin, American musician
 - Albert Rubin (1887–1956), Jewish painter
 - Andrejs Rubins (born 1978), Latvian footballer.
 - Andy Rubin, senior vice president of Mobile at Google
 - Andrew Rubin, Daniel Breen’s father
 - Arthur Rubin (born 1956), American mathematician
 - Avi Rubin, expert on electronic voting security
 - Barbara Rubin (1945–1980), American filmmaker and performance artist
 - Benjamin Rubin (1917–2010), American microbiologist
 - Bruce Joel Rubin (born 1943), Oscar-winning screenwriter.
 - Carol Rubin (1945–2001), American film producer
 - Chanda Rubin (born 1976), American professional tennis player.
 - Charles T. Rubin, political science professor
 - Danny Rubin, an American-Israeli basketball player
 - Daphne Rubin-Vega (born 1969), American dance music singer and actress.
 - Dave Rubin (born 1976), American comedian, talk show host and television personality
 - Donald Rubin, Professor of Statistics
 - Donna Rubin (born 1959), American tennis player
 - Eduard Rubin, Swiss Army, inventor of the first jacketed rifle bullets (1882) and co-inventor of the Schmidt–Rubin rifle
 - Edgar John Rubin (1886–1951)
 - Enriqueta González Rubín (1832–1877), Spanish writer and journalist
 - Eric J. Rubin, Irene Heinz Given Professor of Immunology and Infectious Diseases at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
 - Eric S. Rubin (born 1961), American diplomat and ambassador
 - Erik Rubin (born 1971), Mexican singer and actor.
 - Gayle Rubin (born 1949), American cultural anthropologist
 - Gerald M. Rubin, American geneticist
 - Gretchen Rubin (born 1965), American author and attorney.
 - Harold Rubin, South African and Israeli artist and jazz clarinetist.
 - Harry Rubin (virologist) (1926–2020), American virologist and cancer researcher
 - Harry M. Rubin (born 1952), American business executive
 - Ian Rubin, Ukraine-born Australian rugby league footballer
 - Idan Rubin, Israeli football (soccer) player
 - Ira Rubin (c. 1930–2013), American bridge player
 - Irv Rubin (1946–2002), Canadian-born Kahanist
 - Isaak Illich Rubin (1886–1937), Soviet economist and Marxist theorist.
 - James Rubin (born 1960), U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, 1997–2000
 - James H. Rubin, art historian, New York City
 - Jay Rubin
 - Jean E. Rubin (1926–2002), American mathematician
 - Jennifer Rubin (actress), American film and television actress.
 - Jennifer Rubin (journalist), blogger at The Washington Post
 - Jerry Rubin, American political activist
 - Karl Rubin, American mathematician
 - Kathleen Rubins (born 1978), American microbiologist and NASA astronaut.
 - Lillian B. Rubin (1924–2014), American sociologist and writer
 - Lisa Rubin (born 1977), Canadian theatre director.
 - Louis D. Rubin, Jr. (1923–2013), Southern literature scholar and publisher
 - Marcel Rubin (1905–1995), Austrian composer
 - Meyer Rubin (1924–2020), American geologist
 - Michael Rubin, American scholar and commentator on Middle Eastern history and politics
 - Miri Rubin, British medievalist
 - Noah Rubin (born 1996), American tennis player
 - Philip Rubin (born 1949), American cognitive scientist, technologist, and science administrator
 - Reuven Rubin (1893–1974), Israeli painter
 - Richard Rubin (TV personality), American TV personality.
 - Rick Rubin, American record producer and record label owner,
 - Ron Rubin (disambiguation)
 - Robert Rubin (born 1938), U.S. Treasury Secretary, 1995–1999
 - Sabine Rubin (born 1960), a French politician
 - Samuel M. Rubin ("Sam the Popcorn Man", 1918–2004), an American entrepreneur credited with the mass introduction of popcorn machines to cinemas
 - Shelley Rubin, chairman and CEO of the Jewish Defense League
 - Sherry Rubin, born Sherry Arnstein (1930–1997), was an American public servant, author of influential papers in participatory decision making
 - Theodore Isaac Rubin (1923–2019), American psychiatrist and author
 - Tibor Rubin, Hungarian-American
 - Uri Rubin, professor of Arabic and Islamic literature at Tel Aviv University
 - Vera Rubin (1928–2016), American astronomer
 - Yoram Rubin, bodyguard of Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin
 
See also
References
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