List of Huguenots
Some notable Huguenots or people with Huguenot ancestry include:
Arts & Entertainment
- James Agee, American screenwriter and Pulitzer prize winning author
 - Agrippa d'Aubigné, French poet
 - Earl W. Bascom, American rodeo cowboy, artist, and sculptor
 - Pierre Bayle, French author and philosopher
 - Frédéric Bazille, French Impressionist painter
 - Sébastien Bourdon, French painter
 - Hablot Knight Browne ("Phiz"), British illustrator of Charles Dickens
 - Samuel Chappuzeau, French author, poet, and playwright
 - Jessica Chastain, American actress
 - William Christopher, American actor
 - Marie De Cotteblanche (c1520-c1584) known for her skill in languages and translation of works from Spanish to French.
 - Benjamin Constant, Swiss writer
 - Joan Crawford, American actress
 - Davy Crockett, American folk hero
 - John Theophilus Desaguliers was a French-born British natural philosopher, clergyman, engineer and freemason who was elected to the Royal Society in 1714 as experimental assistant to Isaac Newton.
 - Jean Delannoy, French actor, film editor, screenwriter, and film director
 - Louis de Rochemont, filmmaker
 - Richard de Rochemont, filmmaker
 - William De Morgan, British art potter, tile designer, and author
 - Johnny Depp, American actor
 - Sean Else, is a South African writer and film maker
 - G.E.M. de Ste. Croix, British writer and historian
 - Daphne du Maurier, English writer
 - George du Maurier, English author and cartoonist
 - Gerald du Maurier, English actor
 - Brooke D'Orsay, Canadian actress
 - I. D. du Plessis, South African writer, member of the Dertigers group
 - Max du Preez, is a South African author, columnist and documentary filmmaker and was the founding editor of Vrye Weekblad.
 - Wilhelmina FitzClarence, Countess of Munster, English author
 - Theodor Fontane, German novelist and poet
 - Johnny Fourie, South African Jazz guitarist.
 - Philip Morin Freneau, American poet
 - Judy Garland, actress and singer
 - David Garrick, English actor
 - André Gide, French author
 - Jean-Luc Godard, French film director
 - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Austrian conductor
 - Dashiell Hammett, American author
 - Eddie Izzard, English comedian and actor
 - Derek Jacobi, English actor
 - Elsa Joubert, South African novelist
 - Victor Lardent, British advertising designer who drew Times New Roman
 - William Larminie, Irish poet
 - Christian Ignatius Latrobe, British clergyman, composer, and musician
 - Simon Le Bon, English musician and frontman of 1980s group, Duran Duran.
 - Sheridan Le Fanu, Irish writer
 - Jacques Le Moyne, French artist and explorer
 - Madeleine L'Engle, American author
 - Jean-Étienne Liotard, Swiss painter
 - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet
 - Pierre Loti, French Orientalist writer
 - Pierre des Maizeaux, author
 - Charles Maturin, Irish Gothic writer
 - Jacques-Louis Monod, pianist, composer, and teacher
 - Laurence Olivier, English actor
 - Karl Oenike, 1862 - 1924 German Landscape Painter
 - Bernard Palissy, French potter
 - Tom Paulin, British poet and critic
 - Jon Pertwee, English actor
 - Sean Pertwee, English actor
 - James Planché, British dramatist and officer of arms
 - Tyrone Power, actor
 - Tyrone Power, Sr., actor
 - Frederic Remington, American artist and sculptor
 - Keith Richards, English musician
 - Damon Runyon, American author
 - Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas, French poet
 - Julia Sawalha, British actress of Huguenot and Jordanian ancestry
 - John Spencer-Churchill (artist), English painter and sculptor and nephew of Sir Winston Churchill
 - Charlize Theron, South African actress
 - Henry David Thoreau, American writer
 - Théophile de Viau, poet and dramatist
 - Dorothea Viehmann, German storyteller, source for the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm
 - John Greenleaf Whittier, American poet
 
Education
- Hosea Ballou II, first president of Tufts University
 - Jean Belmain, French scholar, French-language tutor to King Edward VI and Queen Elizabeth I
 - Anthony Benezet, American Quaker educator and abolitionist
 - Jacques Bongars, scholar
 - Ferdinand Buisson, educator, academic, pacifist, and Nobel Peace Prize winner
 - Isaac Casaubon, scholar
 - Meric Casaubon, scholar and translator
 - Harriet Martineau, English writer and educational and economic reformer
 - James Martineau, English philosopher, educator, and Unitarian minister
 - Lewis Page Mercier, British translator of Jules Verne into English
 - Gabriel Monod, historian
 - Petrus Ramus (Pierre de la Ramée), French humanist, logician, and educational reformer
 - Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Swiss writer, philosopher, social and educational theorist
 
Entrepreneurs and businesspeople
- Celest de Villiers, South-Africa Entrepreneur
 - Salomon de Brosse, French architect
 - Warren Buffett, investor, wealthiest person in the world in 1995 and 2008
 - Jean Calas, French merchant, son's murder case championed by Voltaire
 - Jean Chardin (later Sir John Chardin), French jeweller and traveller
 - Jean-Baptiste Say, French economist and businessman
 - Samuel Courtauld (industrialist), American-born British industrialist
 - Samuel Courtauld (art collector), grandnephew of the industrialist, businessman, and art collector
 - Robert Champion de Crespigny, Australian businessman
 - E. I. du Pont, founder of the duPont Company (USA)
 - Peter Carl Fabergé, Russian jeweller
 - Gustav Fabergé, Russian jeweller
 - James Gandon, Anglo - Irish Georgian architect
 - Charles Gide, French economist
 - Jean Francois Hobler, watch and clock maker
 - Leonard Jerome, American financier and grandfather of Winston Churchill
 - Benjamin Henry Latrobe, British-born architect of the United States Capitol
 - Benjamin Henry Latrobe, II, American engineer
 - Gustaf de Laval, Swedish engineer and inventor
 - Henry Laurens, American merchant and delegate to the Continental Congress
 - Daniel Myron LeFever, American gunmaker
 - John Pintard, American merchant and philanthropist
 - Thomas Ravenel, American real estate developer, politician, and reality TV star
 - John D. Rockefeller, American capitalist
 - Robert Lewis Roumieu. British architect
 - Marvin Travis Runyon, American business executive
 - John E. Tourtellotte, American architect
 - Obadiah Williams, Irish merchant
 - Simon De Charmes, Successful Watch and Clockmaker
 - Simone Dupont, Danish descendant
 - Marc Vangrootel, Canadian Web Designer/Developer[1]
 
Journalism
- Tom Brokaw, American television journalist and author
 - Rian Malan, South African journalist
 - Giles Romilly, British journalist, Nazi POW, nephew of Winston Churchill
 - Peregrine Worsthorne, British journalist
 
Law
- Charles Ancillon, French jurist and diplomat
 - Antoine Court, French reformer
 - Warder Cresson, American writer, first U. S. consul to Jerusalem, and convert to Judaism
 - John Jay, first Chief Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court
 - Paul Ricœur, philosopher
 - John Romilly, 1st Baron Romilly, English judge
 - Friedrich Karl von Savigny, German jurist
 - Anton Friedrich Justus Thibaut, German jurist
 
Medicine
- Lou Andreas-Salomé, Russian-born psychoanalyst and author
 - Charles Angibaud, French-born British apothecary
 - George de Benneville, physician and early Universalist
 - Campbell De Morgan, British surgeon
 - John Misaubin, French-born British physician
 - Ambroise Paré, French surgeon
 - Peter Mark Roget, British physician and compiler of the thesaurus
 
Military
- John André, British officer and spy
 - Francis Beaufort, hydrographer of the British Admiralty
 - François de Beauvais, Seigneur de Briquemault, French soldier
 - John Blossett, British soldier, led British expedition to aid Simon Bolivar in the wars of independence against Spain
 - Salomon Blosset de Loche, French general
 - Henri I de Bourbon, prince de Condé, general
 - Louis I de Bourbon, prince de Condé, general
 - Marquis Calmes, general, Veteran of the American Revolution and the War of 1812.
 - Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, Union General in the US Civil War, Governor of the state of Maine.
 - Alfred Gardyne de Chastelain, British Army Lieutenant Colonel, member of the Special Operations Executive
- John de Chastelain, Canadian diplomat, General and Chief of Defence Staff of the Canadian Forces
 
 - Gaspard de Coligny, French admiral
 - Piet Cronje, leader of the Transvaal Republic's military forces during the First and Second Anglo-Boer Wars
 - Hector Francois Chataigner de Cramahé, French soldier, assisted William of Orange in the taking of the British throne
 - Peter de la Billière, British Military Commander
 - Lothar von Arnauld de la Perière highest scoring German U-boat commander of World War I
 - Jean du Casse, French buccaneer and admiral
 - Christiaan du Toit, South African military commander
 - Curt von François, German soldier and administrator in German South-West Africa (now Namibia)
 - Frederick Cockayne Elton, Crimean War recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Hermann von François, German World War I general
 - Charles FitzRoy (British Army officer), British Army officer
 - Henry Gage, 3rd Viscount Gage, Major General in the British Army
 - Adolf Galland, German Luftwaffe General and World War II fighter ace
 - Dr. Elizabeth Gerow, Medical Doctor practiced in Poughkeepsie, NY after Graduating from University of Michigan in 1875. She also studied at Women's Hospital in Boston. She died August 16, 1933.
 - Henri Guisan, Commander in Chief of the Swiss Army during World War II
 - Peter Horry, American Revolutionary War General
 - Benjamin Huger, American Civil War general (Confederate)
 - Petrus Jacobus Joubert, Boer commandant-general of the South African Republic from 1880 to 1900
 - François de la Noue, French soldier, called Bras-de-Fer (Iron Arm)
 - Jean L'Archevêque, French explorer, soldier. and merchant-trader
 - Henri de La Tour d'Auvergne, Duke of Bouillon, French soldier, prince of Sedan and Marshal of France
 - John Laurens, American Revolutionary War hero
 - François le Clerc, pirate known as Jambe de Bois (or Wooden Leg)
 - Anton Wilhelm von L'Estocq, Prussian general
 - John Ligonier, 1st Earl Ligonier Commander-in-Chief of the British Army
 - Adolph Malan, South African World War II fighter pilot ace
 - Magnus Malan, former South African Minister of Defence, Chief of the South African Defence Force, and Chief of the South African Army
 - Ulrich de Maizière, German general
 - Arthur Middleton Manigault, American Civil War general (Confederate)
 - Francis Marion, American Revolutionary War guerrilla fighter
 - Hans-Joachim Marseille, German Luftwaffe ace
 - Peter Mawney, Colonel, Rhode Island militia
 - Charles Manigault Morris, American Navy officer (Confederate)
 - George S Patton, Jr, US Army General, WWII
 - J. Johnston Pettigrew, Confederate general in the American Civil War
 - George Pickett, Confederate general in the American Civil War
 - Charles Portal, British Chief of the Air Staff 1940-1945 Combined Chiefs of Staff 1942-1945
 - Paul Revere, American silversmith, famous for "Paul Revere's Ride" at the outbreak of the American War of Independence.
 - Jean Ribault, naval officer and colonizer
 - Henri, duc de Rohan, French soldier
 - Jacques de Sores, pirate, nicknamed L'Ange Exterminateur (The Exterminating Angel)
 - Barry St. Leger, British officer
 - Charles de Téligny, French soldier and diplomat
 - Charles C. Tew Colonel CSA-killed 1862
 - John Vereker, 6th Viscount Gort, Chief of the Imperial General Staff of the British Army and commander of the British Expeditionary Force in World War II, a descendant of the Delancey family
 - Constand Viljoen, leader of the South African Freedom Front and SADF general
 - John Bordenave Villepigue, Confederate general
 - John C. Villepigue Medal of Honor winner
 
Politics and government
- Constant d'Aubigné, French nobleman, father of Madame de Maintenon, second wife of Louis XIV
 - Isaac Barré, British politician, gave his name to Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania; Barre, Massachusetts; and Barre, Vermont
 - Hester Mahieu, wife of Francis Cooke, captain of the Mayflower, and daughter of French-speaking Calvinists Jacques and Jenne/Jeanne Mahieu.
 - James A. Bayard, U. S. Congressman
 - Francis Bertie, 1st Viscount Bertie of Thame, British Ambassador to Italy and Ambassador to France
 - Maximilien de Béthune, duc de Sully, Marshal of France
 - François Antoine de Boissy d'Anglas, French statesman
 - Jessie Boucherett, English campaigner for women's rights
 - Elias Boudinot, president of the Continental Congress
 - James Bowdoin, Governor of Massachusetts
 - James Bowdoin III, American statesman and philanthropist, benefactor of Bowdoin College
 - Bryant Butler Brooks, Governor of Wyoming
 - William Byrd I, early Virginia settler
 - François Caron, French Director-General of the Dutch East India Company and the French East Indies Company
 - Samuel de Champlain, French explorer, founded Québec City, born into a Huguenot family, died a Roman Catholic
 - Winston Churchill, British prime minister
 - Sarel Cilliers, Boer Voortrekker
 - Louise de Coligny, wife of William the Silent
 - Maurice Couve de Murville, French prime minister
 - Richard Walther Darré, NSDAP Reich Agricultural Minister
 - Hector Theophilus de Cramahé, Lieutenant Governor of Quebec, titular Lieutenant-Governor of Detroit
 - Frederik Willem de Klerk, President of the Republic of South Africa serving from September 1989 to May 1994
 - James DeLancey, Governor of New York
 - Louis Dubois, colonist to New Netherland, co-founded New Paltz, New York
 - Pierre Du Gua, Sieur de Monts, French colonizer of Canada
 - Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours, French writer, economist, and government official
 - Katherine, Duchess of Cambridge
 - Alexander du Pre, 2nd Earl of Caledon, Governor of the Cape of Good Hope, 1806 - 1811.
 - D. F. du Toit, co-founder of Afrikaans language movement Society of Real Afrikaners
 - S. G. du Toit, co-founder of Afrikaans language movement Society of Real Afrikaners
 - Stephanus Jacobus du Toit, co-founder of Afrikaans language movement Society of Real Afrikaners
 - Mareen Duvall, early Maryland settler
 - Eleonore d'Esmier d'Olbreuse, Countess of Wilhelmsburg, grandmother of King George II of England
 - Nigel Farage, British politician, leader of UKIP party
 - Geoffrey FitzClarence, 5th Earl of Munster, British Conservative politician
 - Peter Force, American politician and archivist
 - Jacobus Johannes Fouché, State President of South Africa 1968-1975
 - Frederick the Great of Prussia, son of Sophia Dorothea of Hanover and nephew of George II of Great Britain was matrilineally descended from Alexander II d'Esmiers, Marquis d'Olbreuse, a Huguenot.
 - Alonzo Garcelon, Governor of Maine
 - George II of Great Britain, son of Sophia Dorothea of Celle was matrilineally descended from Alexander II d'Esmiers, Marquis d'Olbreuse, a minor member of the French nobility and a Huguenot.
 - Al Gore, former Vice-President of the United States
 - Jane Griffin (Lady Franklin), wife of Sir John Franklin
 - François Guizot, French historian and statesman
 - Alexander Hamilton, American Secretary of the Treasury
 - Henry IV of France, king of France
 - James Francis Helvetius Hobler, Chief Clerk to the Lord Mayors of London
 - Sir James Houblon, merchant and Member of Parliament
 - Sir John Houblon, First Governor of the Bank of England
 - George Izard, Major General and Governor of Arkansas
 - Ralph Izard, U.S. Senator, President pro tempore of U.S. Senate
 - Jeanne III of Navarre, Queen of Navarre, mother of Henry IV of France
 - Lionel Jospin, French prime minister
 - Charles La Trobe, first lieutenant-governor of the state of Victoria, Australia
 - Charles Lyell, 3rd Baron Lyell, British politician and Conservative member of the House of Lords
 - René Goulaine de Laudonnière, French explorer
 - Daniel François Malan, South African Prime Minister elected on Apartheid platform
 - Lothar de Maizière, German politician
 - Thomas de Maizière, German politician
 - Gideon Malherbe, co-founder of the Afrikaans language movement Society of Real Afrikaners
 - Jan Masaryk, Czechoslovakian diplomat and politician
 - Gouverneur Morris, American statesman, represented Pennsylvania in the Constitutional Convention
 - Beyers Naudé, Afrikaner anti-apartheid activist and cleric
 - Jozua François Naudé, acting President of South Africa from 1967 to 1968
 - Oscar Neebe, American labor movement leader
 - Daniel Perrin, one of the first permanent European inhabitants of Staten Island, New York
 - Arthur Cecil Pigou, English economist
 - Élisée Reclus, geographer and anarchist
 - Piet Retief, Boer Voortrekker
 - Daniel Roberdeau, Congressman and militia General
 - Jean-François de la Roque de Roberval, first lieutenant governor of French Canada
 - Michel Rocard, French prime minister
 - Esmond Romilly, British socialist and anti-fascist
 - Samuel Romilly, English legal reformer and Member of Parliament
 - Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd President of the United States
 - Sara Roosevelt, mother of Franklin D. Roosevelt
 - Theodore Runyon, American lawyer, politician, Civil War general, New Jersey court judge, first U.S. ambassador to Germany
 - William Nelson Runyon, American lawyer, politician, governor of New Jersey
 - Jedediah Smith, American explorer
 - Eugène Terre'Blanche South African political activist
 - Charles Tupper, Canadian father of Confederation, Premier of Nova Scotia (1864-1867)and 7th Prime Minister of Canada (1896) was reputed to be a Huguenot descendant.
 - Luis Vernet, Argentine governor of the Falkland Islands
 
Dr. Johannes Dr Last Montagne, aka Jean Mousnier de la Montagne, physician of New Amsterdam, vice- director of New Netherland, with special responsibility for Fort Orange (Albany) and Beverwyck.
Religion
- Abraham Faure, Clergyman and author in the Cape Colony
 - Jessé de Forest, leader of a group of Walloon-Huguenots who fled Europe due to religious persecutions
 - Jacques Abbadie, French theologian
 - Moses Amyraut, French theologian, proponent of Amyraldism
 - Hosea Ballou, American preacher, co-founder of Universalist theology in America
 - Henry Bidleman Bascom, U.S. Congressional Chaplain, Methodist Bishop
 - Theodore Beza, French theologian
 - David Blondel, French clergyman, historian, and classical scholar
 - John Calvin, French-born Swiss theologian
 - Louis Cappel, French clergyman and Hebrew scholar
 - Sebastian Castellio, theologian and early proponent of freedom of conscience
 - Odet de Coligny, former cardinal
 - Jean Daillé, French theologian
 - William Farel, theologian
 - Guillaume de Félice, Comte de Panzutti, French abolitionist and theologian
 - John Gano, Baptist preacher and Revolutionary War chaplain
 - Pierre Jurieu, French pastor and author
 - Paul Lorrain, secretary to Samuel Pepys, Anglican clergyman, and ordinary of Newgate Prison
 - Andrew Lortie, theologian
 - Adolphe Monod, pastor
 - Frédéric Monod, pastor
 - Josué de la Place, French theologian
 - Paul Rabaut, pastor
 - Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Étienne, pastor and Girondist
 - Charles Spurgeon, first pastor of the Metropolitan Tabernacle, founder of a theological college, almshouses and orphanage, and a writer
 
Science
- John Theophilus Desaguliers was a French-born British natural philosopher, clergyman, engineer and freemason who was elected to the Royal Society in 1714 as experimental assistant to Isaac Newton.
 - Augustus De Morgan, British mathematician
 - Alexander du Toit, South African geologist
 - Daniel du Toit, South African astronomer
 - Alexander von Humboldt, German naturalist
 - Wilhelm von Humboldt, German linguist
 - Augustin Pyramus de Candolle, Swiss botanist
 - Gideon Joubert, Afrikaans science non-fiction author
 - Matthew Fontaine Maury, father of modern oceanography and naval meteorology
 - Florence Bascom, American geologist
 - Abraham de Moivre, French-born British mathematician
 - Jacques Monod, biologist, Nobel Prize winner
 - Théodore Monod, naturalist, explorer, and activist
 - Arthur Alcock Rambaut, Royal Astronomer of Ireland and Radcliffe Observer at the Radcliffe Observatory, Oxford University
 - Roger Revelle, one of the first scientists to study global warming and tectonic plates.
 - Yves Rocard, French nuclear physicist
 
Sport
- Richie Benaud, Australian cricketer and commentator
 - Roy Cazaly, Australian Rules footballer
 - Tony Cottee, West Ham United and England footballer
 - Piers Courage, English racing driver
 - Hansie Cronje, South African cricketer
 - Phil de Glanville, England rugby union international
 - Jürgen Hahn, German handball player
 - Paul Michael Levesque, American pro wrestler famous under pseudonym of Triple H
 - Buddy Pelletier, Professional Surfer-Member of Surfing Hall of fame
 - François Pienaar captain of the Springboks
 - Elfrida Pigou, Canadian mountaineer
 - Juan Theron, South African cricketer
 - AB De Villiers, South African cricketer
 - Andre Nel, South African cricketer
 - Faf du Plessis, South African cricketer
 - Andy Blignaut, Zimbabwean cricketer
 
Other
- Jane Franklin wife of Sir John Franklin
 
References
- ↑ "France in the Time of Paul Vachon". www.pomerleau.org. Retrieved 2015-08-22.
 
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, April 20, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.