List of Huguenots

Some notable French Huguenots or people with French Huguenot ancestry include:

Architects

  • Salomon de Brosse (1571–1626), French architect.[1]
  • Isaac de Caus (1590–1648), architect, garden designer.[2]
  • Samuel Fortrey (1622–1681), architect, designer of Kew Palace, descendant of de La Forteries.[2]
  • James Gandon (1742–1823), Anglo-Irish Georgian architect.[3]
  • Benjamin Henry Latrobe (1764–1820), British-born architect of the United States Capitol.[4]
  • Le Corbusier (1887–1965), architect.[5]
  • Richard Leplastrier (1939–), Australian architect.[6]
  • Gabriel Manigault (1758–1809), American architect, descendant of Pierre Manigault from La Rochelle.[7]
  • Daniel Marot (1661–1752), architect and furniture designer, ancestor of actress Audrey Hepburn.[8][9]
  • Gottfried Semper (1803–1879), German architect, art critic.[10]
  • Samuel Sanders Teulon (1812–1873), British Victorian Architect.
  • John E. Tourtellotte (1869–1939), American architect.

Artists

Chefs and restaurateurs

  • Nataniël Le Roux, television food show host.[57][58]
  • Sally Lunn, baker.[59][60]
  • Ian Parmenter (1946–2024), English-born Australian celebrity chef. Key work: Cooking with Passion.[61]
  • Alexis Soyer (1810–1858), celebrity chef and philanthropist. Key work: A Shilling Cookery Book for the People.[62]
  • Paul Tremo (1733–1810), the head chef at the court of King Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski of Poland.[63][64]

Doctors and medical practitioners

  • Lou Andreas-Salomé (1861–1937), Russian-born psychoanalyst and author.[65][66]
  • Charles Angibaud, French-born British apothecary.[67]
  • Jenny Aubry (1903–1987), French psychiatrist and psychanalyst from a Protestant-Jewish family and a protege of Jacques Lacan, she was one of the first female doctors to qualify in France. Sister of Louise Weiss and mother of Élisabeth Roudinesco.[68][69]
  • Daniel Bovet (1907–1992), pharmacologist, Nobel Prize winner.[70][71]
  • Pierre Bovet (1878–1965), psychologist, translator of Boy Scouts guides into French, co-founder of the Rousseau Institute in Geneva, father of Daniel Bovet.[71]
  • Peter Chamberlen, physician, obstetrician, invented delivery via forceps.[2]
  • George de Benneville (1702–1793), physician, left Huguenot background for unorthodox religious beliefs.[72]
  • Theodore Turquet de Mayerne, physician.[2]
  • Campbell De Morgan (1811–1876), British surgeon.[73]
  • Antoine Dubois (died 1572), French surgeon, martyr, Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre.[74]
  • Daniel Peter Layard (1721–1802), doctor and midwife.[75]
  • John Misaubin, French-born British physician
  • Lucie Odier (1886–1984), nurse, member of the International Committee of the Red Cross, expert on relief actions for civilians, outspoken opponent of Nazi Germany.[76][77]
  • Oskar Panizza (1853–1921), psychiatrist, writer and mental patient.[78]
  • Ambroise Paré (1509–1590), French surgeon.[79]
  • Louis Perrier, physician, mineral water company founder.[80]
  • Samuel Pozzi (1846–1918), doctor.[81]
  • Paul Reclus (1847–1914), doctor.[81]
  • Élisabeth Roudinesco (1944–), French Protestant-Jewish psychoanalyst, daughter of Jenny Aubry.[82]
  • Paul-Louis Simond, medical researcher.[83]
  • Raphael Thorius (died 1625), physician and poet.[84]

Educationalists

  • John Bascom (1827–1911), American university president, writer.[13]
  • Jean Belmain (died after 1557), French scholar, French-language tutor to King Edward VI and Queen Elizabeth I.[85][86]
  • Anthony Benezet (1713–1784), American Quaker educator and abolitionist, from Saint-Quentin.[87][88]
  • Jacques Bongars (1554–1612), scholar.[89]
  • David Renaud Boullier (1699–1759), Dutch theologian.[90]
  • James Bowdoin III (1752–1811), founder of Bowdoin College.[91][92]
  • Ferdinand Buisson (1841–1932), educator, academic, pacifist, Nobel Peace Prize winner.[93]
  • Isaac Casaubon, scholar.[94]
  • Méric Casaubon (1599–1671), scholar, translator, Anglican minister, son of Isaac Casaubon.[95][96]
  • Pierre Courthial, founding dean, Faculté Jean Calvin, Aix-en-Provence.[97]
  • Daniel de Superville (1696–1773), founder of the University of Erlangen.[98]
  • Reinhart Dozy (1820–1883), academic at Leiden.[99]
  • Esther Duflo (1972–), French economist, winner of the Nobel Prize for Economics.[100]
  • Charles Gide (1847–1932), French economist and pacifist.[101]
  • Clarisse Herrenschmidt (1946–), archaeologist, historian, philologist, journalist, and linguist.[102]
  • Austen Henry Layard (1817–1894), English Assyriologist, traveller, cuneiformist, art historian, draughtsman, collector, politician, diplomat and President of the Huguenot Society of Great Britain.[42]
  • Augustin Marlorat (1506–1562), theologian and martyr.[103]
  • David Martin (1639–1721), French theologian.[104][105]
  • Frédéric Passy (1822–1912), French economist, author and pacifist who was a founding member of several peace societies, joint winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1901 for his work in the European peace movement, a convert to Protestantism from Roman Catholicism.[106]
  • Daniel Patte, French-American theologian.[107][108]
  • Félix Pécaut (1828–1898), educationalist, founder of the Ecole Normale Supérieure de Fontenay-aux-Roses, and pacifist.[109]
  • Arthur Cecil Pigou, English economist.[110]
  • Évelyne Sullerot (1924–2017), sociologist.[111]

Entertainers, performers, composers and film-makers

  • James Agee (1909–1955), American screenwriter, Pulitzer Prize-winning author.[112][113]
  • Marc Allégret (1900–1973), Film-maker, son of Protestant missionary Elie Allégret.[114]
  • Yves Allégret (1905–1987), French film-maker, pacifist, son of Protestant missionary Elie Allégret.[114]
  • René Allio (1924–1995), French film-maker.[115]
  • Cecilia Maria Barthélemon (1767–1859), opera singer and composer, daughter of François-Hippolyte Barthélémon.[2]
  • François Hippolyte Barthélémon (1741–1808), composer of operas, masques, symphonies, chamber music and hymns (Awake my soul, and with the sun, Mighty God While Angels Bless Thee), from Bordeaux.[2]
  • Anna Bishop (1810–1884), English operaric soprano, aunt of Briton Riviere, believed to be the inspiration for the title character in George du Maurier's Trilby.[42]
  • Humphrey Bogart (1899–1957), American actor, descended from Huguenot refugees in the Netherlands.[116][117]
  • Dion Boucicault (1820–1890), Irish actor and playwright.[118]
  • Loys Bourgeois (1510–1559), Psalm music composer (the "Old 100th").[119]
  • Marlon Brando (1924–2004), American actor, descended from Chretien DuBois of the Comté of Coupigny, near Lille in Artois.[19][120][121]
  • Edmond Louis Budry (1854–1932), hymnwriter ("Thine Be the Glory").[122][123]
  • Godfrey Cass (1867–1951), Australian actor, descendant of the Castieau family.[15]
  • Christopher Cazenove (1943–2010), English actor.[124]
  • Timothée Chalamet (1995–), French-American actor.[125][126]
  • Charlie Chaplin (1889–1977), British actor, likely to have had Huguenot ancestry but this has not yet been fully confirmed.[127][128][129]
  • Cyd Charisse (1921–2008), American actress and dancer.[130]
  • Jessica Chastain (1977–), American actress, Academy Award winner for Best Actress 2022, descended from Dr Pierre Chastain who came from near the village of Chârost (his family had earlier lived in Bourges).[19][131]
  • Charles Chauvel (1897–1959), Australian film-maker, ancestors from Blois in the Loire Valley.[21][132]
  • William Christopher (1932–2016), American actor.
  • George Clooney (1961–), American actor, nephew of Rosemary Clooney, descended from the Koch family of Alsace-Lorraine.[133]
  • Rosemary Clooney (1928–2002), American jazz and Hollywood musicals singer and actress, descended from the Koch family of Alsace-Lorraine.[133]
  • Olivia Colman (1974–), English actress, descended from Anne Foissin of Paris.[134][135]
  • Alice Cooper (real name Vincent Damon Furnier) (1948–), American heavy metal singer and born-again Christian.[136][137][138]
  • Gary Cooper (1901–1961), American actor, descended from the Brazier family.[139][140]
  • Daniel Craig (1968–), English actor, descended from Pastor Daniel Chamier of Le Mont, near Mocas, west of Grenoble. (Chamier's father, in turn, came from Avignon.)[141]
  • Joan Crawford (1905–1977), American actress, descended from the Huguenots,[142] Dr Pierre Chastain and Chretien DuBois,[19][120][143] on her father's side.[144][117]
  • Konstanze Dahn (real name Constanze Le Gaye) (1814–1894), German actress.[145][146]
  • Bette Davis (1908–1989), American actress, descended from the Favor family.[147] on her mother's side.[148][149][150]
  • Jean Delannoy (1908–2008), French actor, film editor, screenwriter and film director.[151]
  • Paschal de l'Estocart (1538–1587), Psalm music composer.[152]
  • Cara Delevingne (1992–), English actress and model, French Huguenot ancestry.[153]
  • Poppy Delevingne (1986–), English actress and model, sister of Cara, French Huguenot ancestry.[153]
  • Cecil B. DeMille (1881–1959), American film-maker.[154][155]
  • Johnny Depp (1963–), American actor, descended from Jean and Pierre Dieppe of Dieppe, Normandy.[156][19][157][158]
  • Lily-Rose Depp (1999–), actress, model, daughter of Johnny Depp, descended from Jean and Pierre Dieppe of Dieppe, Normandy.[117]
  • Louis de Rochemont (1899–1978), filmmaker.
  • Richard de Rochemont (1903–1982), filmmaker.[159]
  • Emil Devrient (1803–1876), German actor.[160]
  • Ludwig Devrient (1784–1832), German actor.[161]
  • Brandon deWilde (1942–1972), American actor.[162]
  • Brooke D'Orsay (1982–), Canadian actress.[163][164]
  • Gerald du Maurier (1873–1934), English actor.[73]
  • Tilla Durieux (1880–1971), Austrian actress.[165]
  • Ampie du Preez (1982–), South African singer-songwriter.[166]
  • Elize du Toit (1980–), South African actress.[167][166]
  • Wikus du Toit (1972–), South African actor and comedian.[167][166]
  • Robert Duvall (1931–), actor, descended from Mareen Duvall of Nantes.[168][169]
  • Brian Eno (1948–), English music producer, ambient musician, atheist, descended from the Hennot family of Mons, Flanders.[170][171]
  • Johnny Fourie, South African jazz guitarist.[166]
  • Guillaume Franc (1505–1571), Psalm music composer.[172]
  • Judy Garland (1922–1969), American jazz and Hollywood musicals singer and actress,[173][174][175] French Huguenot ancestry on her father's side.[176][177][178]
  • David Garrick (1717–1779), English theatre actor and playwright, descendant of David de la Garrique from near Saintonge.[45][179][180]
  • Richard Gere, American actor, descendant of Mayflower pilgrim Francis Cooke and his Huguenot wife, Hester Mahieu.[54]
  • Kendji Girac (1996–), French pop and flamenco musician.[181]
  • Jean-Luc Godard (1930–2022), French film director and film critic,[182][115][183] related to the Monod family.[184]
  • Claude Goudimel (1520–1572), composer of musical settings for the Psalms (Genevan Psalter), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[185]
  • Nikolaus Harnoncourt (1939–2016), Austrian conductor.[186][187]
  • Audrey Hepburn (1929–1993), Belgian-born British actress and humanitarian, descended from Daniel Marot of Paris.[8]
  • Werner Herzog (1942–), German film director.[188]
  • Hozier (1990–), Irish blues, and rock musician, Huguenot ancestry on his mother's side.[189]
  • André Isoir (1935–2016), classical organist.[190][191]
  • Eddie Izzard, English comedian, actor, family thought to originate in the Pyrenees.[192][193]
  • Derek Jacobi (1938–), English actor, descended from the financier Joseph de la Plaigne of Bordeaux.[194][195]
  • Julian Jarrold (1960–), English film-maker, descended from the prominent Jarrold's family of Norwich, known for the department store and publishing businesses, family of Huguenot or Dutch descent.[196]
  • Dakota Johnson (1989–), American actress and model, daughter of Don Johnson.[197][198]
  • Don Johnson (1949–), American actor.[197]
  • Quincy Jones (1933–), American jazz and blues composer and record producer, descended from the Lanier family.[199]
  • Val Kilmer (1959–), American actor.[200]
  • Alice Krige (1954–), South African actress.[201]
  • Christian Ignatius Latrobe (1758–1836), British clergyman, composer and musician, whose ancestors came from Languedoc.[202]
  • Nicholas Lanier (1588–1666), Master of the King's Musick.[45]
  • Ethel Lavenu (1842–1917), British actress, mother of Tyrone Power and grandmother of Tyrone Power junior, descended from the Huguenots, Hector Francois Chataigner de Cramahé and Salomon Blosset de Loche, both of whom fought for William of Orange.[203]
  • Simon Le Bon (1958–), English musician and frontman of pop-rock band Duran Duran.[204]
  • Claudin Le Jeune (1530–1600), composer and music publisher of the Genevan Psalter, from Valenciennes.[205]
  • Bill Le Sage (1927–2001), British jazz musician, descendant of a Valenciennes journeyman silkweaver, Jacques Le Sage, and his son, also a journeyman silkweaver, Pierre Le Sage (born Leiden, died Spitalfields, married into the Le Grand family of Saint-Quentin. Later Le Sage descendants in Spitalfields married with the Levesques, weavers originally from Bolbec, and with the Le Maréchals of Caen. (One branch of this Le Sage family later emigrated to Australia whilst another branch went to the Philadelphia-New Jersey area in the United States.)[206][207]
  • Hal LeSueur (1903–1963), American actor and the brother of actress, Joan Crawford.[120][143]
  • Zachary Levi (real name: Zachary Pugh) (1980–), American actor and practising Christian, descended from François De Puy of Calais.[208][209][210]
  • Andrew Lincoln (1973–), English actor.[211]
  • Jean-Bernard Logier (1777–1846), composer who developed a system of musical notation.[212]
  • Lorna Luft (1952–), American jazz and Hollywood musicals singer and actress, daughter of Judy Garland.[173][174]
  • César Malan (1787–1864), hymnwriter ("Everyday I Will Bless You", "It Is Not Death to Die", "O Holy Spirit Blessed Comforter", "What Are the Pleasures of the World?" and "My Saviour's Praises I Will Sing"), originator of the modern hymn movement in the French Reformed Church, pastor and novelist.[213]
  • Clément Marot (1496–1544), poet who versified the Psalms into French (Genevan Psalter).[214]
  • Liza Minnelli (1946–), American jazz and Hollywood musicals singer and actress, daughter of Judy Garland.[173][174]
  • Jacques-Louis Monod (1927–2020), pianist, composer and teacher.[215][184]
  • Laurence Olivier (1907–1989), English actor, descendant of Pastor Jerome Olivier, chaplain to the Prince of Orange,[19][216][217] family originally from Nay in the Pyrenees.[218]
  • Valerie Perrine (1943–), American actress, descended from Daniel Perrin of Normandy.[219][220]
  • Jon Pertwee (1919–1996), English actor, descended from the Perthuis de Laillevault family of Provence.[221][222]
  • Michael Pertwee (1916–1991), playwright and screenwriter, son of Roland Pertwee and brother of Jon Pertwee, descendant of the Perthuis de Laillevault family of Provence.[221]
  • Roland Pertwee (1885–1963), playwright and screenwriter, father of Jon Pertwee and Michael Pertwee, descended from the Perthuis de Laillevault family of Provence.[221]
  • Sean Pertwee (1964–), English actor, son of Jon Pertwee, descended from the Perthuis de Laillevault family of Provence.[221]
  • Joaquin Phoenix (1974–), American actor, distant French Huguenot ancestry on his father's side.[223][224][225]
  • River Phoenix (1970–1993), American actor, brother of Joaquin Phoenix.[223][224][225]
  • Tyrone Power (1914–1958), actor, descended from the Lavenu and Blossett families.[226][73]
  • Tyrone Power, Sr. (1869–1931), actor, descended from the Lavenu and Blossett families.[226]
  • Jean-Jacques Quesnot de La Chênée (died 1708), French librettist and theatre manager who staged Lully operas for Huguenot refugee community.[227]
  • André Raison (1640–1719), French Baroque composer and organist.
  • Kate Raison (1962–), Australian actress
  • Miranda Raison (1977–), English screen and stage actress.
  • Robert Redford (1936–), American actor, descended from Philippe de La Noye (Philip Delano) of the Leiden Huguenot refugee community (the family originated in Lannoy, near Tourcoing).[228][229][230]
  • David Reinhardt, jazz guitarist, grandson of Django Reinhardt.[231]
  • Renaud (1952–), pop-rock singer, anti-military activist, agnostic from a Protestant family.[232]
  • Keith Richards (1943–), English blues and rock guitarist, descended from the Dupree family of silkweavers.[233][234]
  • André Rieu (1949–) Dutch violinist, descendant of the Rieu family of the Auvergne.[235][236]
  • Ruben Saillens (1855–1942), Huguenot-born Baptist pastor, leader of the Evangelical Mission Populaire and hymn writer (Torrents d’amour et de grâce, La Cevenole).[237][238][239][240]
  • Julia Sawalha (1968–) and Nadia Sawalha (1964–), British actresses of Huguenot and Jordanian ancestry, descended from a Norman silkweaver, Daniel Duboc.[241][242]
  • Jérôme Seydoux, head of Pathé, head of Charges Réunies, shareholder in Olympique Lyonnais Football Club.[111][243]
  • Léa Seydoux (1985–), French actress, patron of the charity Empire des enfants,[244] atheist member of the Protestant Schlumberger and Seydoux families.[245][246][247]
  • Delphine Seyrig (1932–1990), actress and film-maker, member of an intellectual Protestant family from Alsace.[248]
  • Nigel Terry (1945–2015), English actor.[249]
  • Charlize Theron (1975–), South African actress, descended from the pioneering South African farmer, Jacques Therond, originally of Nîmes, Languedoc.[250][251][252]
  • David Thewlis (1963–), English actor.[253][254]
  • Mary Travers (1936–2009), American pop singer, member of the group Peter, Paul and Mary.[19]
  • Jimmie Vaughan (1951–), American blues guitarist, brother of Stevie Ray Vaughan, descended from the LaRue family.[255]
  • Stevie Ray Vaughan (1954–1990), American blues guitarist, descended from the LaRue family[255] and the Joquen and DuFour families.
  • Hermann Vezin (1829–1910), American actor.[256]
  • Isaac Watts (1674–1748), hymnwriter ("When I Survey the Wondrous Cross", "Joy to the World" and "Our God, Our Help in Ages Past"), pastor and theologian, descended from the Taunton family. Key work: Logic, or the Right Use of Reason, in the Inquiry After Truth.[257][258]
  • Orson Welles, American actor and director, descendant of Mayflower pilgrim Francis Cooke and his Huguenot wife, Hester Mahieu.[54]
  • Wil Wheaton (1972–), American actor, atheist with distant Huguenot ancestry from Montserrat on his mother's side.[259][260]
  • Brian Wilson, American pop musician (Beach Boys), descendant of Mayflower pilgrim Francis Cooke and his Huguenot wife, Hester Mahieu.[54]
  • Carl Wilson, American pop musician (Beach Boys), descendant of Mayflower pilgrim Francis Cooke and his Huguenot wife, Hester Mahieu.[54]
  • Dennis Wilson, American pop musician (Beach Boys), descendant of Mayflower pilgrim Francis Cooke and his Huguenot wife, Hester Mahieu.[54]
  • Joanne Woodward (1930–), American actress and philanthropist, descended from the Gignilliat family of Switzerland.[261][262][263]

Entrepreneurs and businesspeople

  • Karl Benz (1844–1929), German inventor.[264]
  • Charles Bosanquet, merchant.[25]
  • James Whatman Bosanquet (1804–1877), English banker and theologian. (Key work: Messiah the Prince, or the Inspiration of the Prophecies of Daniel.)[265][266]
  • Samuel Bosanquet (1744–1806), English merchant and banker.[265][266]
  • Warren Buffett (1930–), investor, wealthiest person in the world in 1995 and 2008, descendant of Mareen Duvall.[267]
  • Delillers Carbonnel (born 1654), banker, son of Guillaume Carbonnel.[268]
  • Edward Cazalet (1827–1833), merchant and industrialist, promoter of Zionism.[269]
  • Philip Cazenove, stockbroker, philanthropist (supported Jewish domestic charities - Calvinists, religious non-Conformists felt a special affiliation for them as fellow-marginalised people).[269]
  • Samuel Courtauld (industrialist) (1793–1881), American-born British industrialist.[270]
  • Samuel Courtauld (art collector), grandnephew of the industrialist, businessman, art collector.[271]
  • Frederic de Coninck (1740–1811), entrepreneur.[22]
  • Robert Champion de Crespigny (1950–), Australian businessman (Normandy Mining).[272]
  • Gustaf de Laval, Swedish engineer, inventor.[273]
  • Benjamin Delessert (1773–1847), entrepreneur, banker.[274]
  • Etienne Delessert (1735–1816), banker.[274]
  • François-Marie Delessert (1780–1868), banker and politician, son of Étienne Delessert.[275]
  • Charles Delevingne (1949–), English property developer, father of Cara and Poppy Delevingne, French Huguenot ancestry.[153]
  • Malcolm Delevingne (1868–1950), English civil servant.[276]
  • Guillaume Delprat, Dutch-Australian manager of BHP.[6]
  • Jean de Neuflize (1850–1928), banker.[277]
  • James-Alexandre de Pourtalès (1776–1855) banker.[278]
  • E. I. du Pont, founder of the duPont Company (US).[279]
  • Peter Faneuil (1700–1743), merchant, slave trader and philanthropist.[280]
  • John Minet Fector (1754–1821), Dover shipping magnate, banker, smuggled gold out of England to finance Napoleon Bonaparte. Charles Darnay from Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities is believed to be based on him. Son of Peter Fector.[281][282][283]
  • Claude Fonnereau (1677–1740), banker, from La Rochelle.[268]
  • James Gaultier, banker, from Angoulême.[268]
  • King C. Gillette (1855–1932), American safety razor entrepreneur and utopian theorist.[284]
  • François Havy (1709–1766), French-born Canadian merchant.[285]
  • Thierry Hermès (1801–1878), founder of Hermès fashion chain.[286]
  • Hans-Konrad Hottinger (1764–1841), banker.[287][288]
  • John Houblon (1632–1712), first governor of the Bank of England.[289]
  • Howard Hughes, American inventor, industrialist, billionaire[290]
  • Leonard Jerome, American financier, grandfather of Winston Churchill.[291]
  • André Koechlin, founder of Alstom.[292]
  • Robert Ladbroke (1713–1773), merchant banker, politician.[27]
  • George Larpent (1786–1855), British businessman.[269]
  • Benjamin Henry Latrobe, II, American engineer.
  • Henry Laurens, American merchant, delegate to the Continental Congress.[293]
  • Jean Lefebvre (1714–1766), French-born, Canadian merchant.[294]
  • François Lévesque (1732–1787), French-born Canadian merchant, justice of the peace and politician, of the Lévesque family of weavers originally from Bolbec, Normandy.[295]
  • Charles Mallet (1815–1902), banker.[296]
  • Gabriel Manigault (1704–1781), American merchant.[297]
  • Jean Martell (1694–1753), cognac manufacturer.[298]
  • William Minet, merchant, son of Isaac Minet.[282][281]
  • Thomas Papillon (1623–1702), merchant, investor in the East India Company, master of the Mercers’ Company.[2]
  • Pierre Peschier (1739–1812), banker.[22]
  • Armand Peugeot (1849–1914), car manufacturer (French Lutheran).[299][300]
  • Thierry Peugeot (1957–), head of Peugeot supervisory board (French Lutheran).[300]
  • John Pintard, American merchant, philanthropist.[301][302]
  • Thomas Ravenel, American real estate developer, politician, reality TV star, son of philanthropist and disabled people's rights activisit, Louise Ravenel Dougherty.[303][304][305]
  • John D. Rockefeller (1839–1937), American capitalist, descended from the Rochefeuille or Rocquefeuille family.[306]
  • Jean-Baptiste Say (1767–1832), French economist, businessman.[307]
  • Louis Say (1774–1840), founder of Béghin-Say, brother of the economist, Jean-Baptiste Say.[308]
  • Louis Schweitzer (1942–), head of Renault.[111]
  • Serge Tchuruk (1937–), head of Alcatel.[111]
  • Sam Walton (1918–1992), founder of Walmart and Sam's Club, descendant of Chretien DuBois.[120]
  • Obadiah Williams, Irish merchant.[309]

Farmers

  • Sir Richard Boyer (1891–1961), Australian pastoralist and chairman of the ABC.[21]
  • Olivier de Serres (1539–1619), horticulturalist,[310] peaceworker[311] and ecologist.[312]
  • Francois du Toit, South African farmer.[313]
  • Pierre Joubert (1664–1732), South African viticulturalist.[313]
  • Lewis Majendie (1756–1833), English agriculturalist.[314]
  • Abel Head Pierce American rancher, descendant of Mayflower pilgrim Francis Cooke and his Huguenot wife, Hester Mahieu.[54]
  • Jean Roy, viticulturist who emigrated to South Africa and founded a vineyard there.[315]

Geographers

  • Jean Le Clerc, geographer.[316]
  • Jean Palairet (1697–1774), French cartographer, French tutor to the children of King George II of the United Kingdom, partly responsible for introducing the game of cricket to the Netherlands.[317]
  • Élie Reclus (1827–1904), ethnographer and anarchist, son of Pastor Jacques Reclus.[318]
  • Élisée Reclus (1830–1905), geographer and anarchist, son of Pastor Jacques Reclus.[318]
  • Onésime Reclus (1837–1916), geographer, son of Pastor Jacques Reclus.[318]
  • John Rocque (1705–1762), cartographer, specialised in mapping of gardens, created plans of British towns and pioneering road guides for travellers.[9]
  • Mary Ann Rocque (1725–1770), cartographer, wife of John Rocque, daughter of the Scalé family.[319]

Historians

  • Jean Baubérot (1941–), historian.[320]
  • Elie Benoist (1640–1728), historian of the Edict of Nantes, pastor.[321]
  • Maximilien de Béthune, duc de Sully (1560–1641), memoirist. Key work: Économies royales.[312][322]
  • Patrick Cabanel (1961–), historian.[323]
  • Marianne Carbonnier-Burkard (1949–), historian, vice-president of the Society for the History of French Protestantism and a member of the National Ethics Advisory Committee for Life and Health Sciences.[324]
  • Bernard Cottret (1951–2020), historian.[325]
  • Jean-Henri Merle d'Aubigné (1794–1872), historian and pastor, descendant of Agrippa d'Aubigné. Key work: Discourse on the History of Christianity.[326][327]
  • François de la Noue (1531–1591), memoirist.[312]
  • Lancelot Voisin de La Popelinière (1541–1608), historian.[328]
  • Paul de Rapin (1661–1725), historian. Key work: History of England.[329]
  • Gédéon Tallemant des Réaux (1619–1690), memoirist.[312]
  • Jean de Serres (1540–1598), historian, political advisor and pastor.[330]
  • G.E.M. de Ste. Croix (1910–2000), British Marxist historian and atheist, paternal lineage was Huguenot.[331]
  • Charlotte Duplessis-Mornay (1550–1606), memoirist, wife of Philippe de Mornay. Key work: Memories of Philippe de Mornay[332]
  • James Fontaine, memoirist. Key work: Memoirs of a Huguenot Family.[333]
  • François Guizot (1787–1874), French historian, statesman. Key work: History of France.[334]
  • Auguste Himly (1823–1906), French historian and geographer.[335]
  • Francis Labilliere (1840–1895), Australian historian and imperialist, son of Huguenot-descended Charles Edgar de Labilliere. He was one of the very earliest advocates of Imperial Federation, suggested the foudantion of the Imperial Federation League and later its secretary, member of the council of the Royal Colonial Institute, and the first person to suggest the annexation of Eastern New Guinea.[336][337]
  • Jules Michelet (1798–1874), historian.[338]
  • Gabriel Monod (1844–1912), historian, Dreyfus supporter.[339]
  • Napoléon Peyrat (1809–1881), pastor and historian.[340]
  • Paul Raison (art historian), long time Chairman of Christie's.
  • Charles Read (1819–1898), historian.[341]
  • Joseph Justus Scaliger (1540–1609), historian, creationist and chronologer. Key work: Manilius.[342]
  • Charles Seignobos (1854–1942), historian.[343]
  • Gédéon Tallemant des Réaux (1619–1690), historian. Key work: Historiettes.[344]
  • Melesina Trench (1768–1827), Irish diarist, granddaughter of Bishop Richard Chenevix, descended from the Chenevix family of Metz, Lorraine.[345]

Jewellers, clockmakers and craftsmen

Journalists

  • Reginald Bosanquet (1932–1984), English newsreader.[367]
  • Abel Boyer (1667–1729), journalist.[45]
  • Tom Brokaw (born 1940), American television journalist, author.[368]
  • Frank Deford (1938–2017), American sports journalist.[369]
  • Charles De Boos, Australian journalist.[6]
  • Michael de la Roche (1710–1742), journalist and translator, advocate of religious toleration, member of the Rainbow Coffee House Group.[317]
  • Max du Preez, South African journalist and author.[166]
  • Raymond Durgnat (1932–2002), English film critic, opponent of structuralism and its associated far-left politics, advocate of frequently-derided film-maker Michael Powell, opponent of left wing intellectuals, supporter of working-class culture, descended from French Huguenot refugees who fled to Switzerland.[370]
  • Sean Else, South African writer, filmmaker
  • Orla Guerin (1966–), Irish war correspondent.[363]
  • Gideon Joubert (1923–2010), South African science journalist and Intelligent Design proponent.[371][166]
  • Rian Malan (1954–), South African journalist and memoirist, descended from Jacques Malan of Provence and South African Prime Minister, Daniel Malan. Key work: My Traitor's Heart.[372][373][166]
  • Matthieu Maty (1718–1776), journalist, founded Journal Brittanique which helped to familiarize French readers with English literature, member of the Royal Society, under-librarian of the British Museum, from Dauphiné.[2]
  • Pierre Motteux (1718–1776), journalist, founder of Gentleman's Journal, from Rouen.[2]
  • Max Raison, publisher and managing editor of Picture Post, and co-founder of New Scientist.
  • Théophraste Renaudot (1584–1653), considered the first French journalist, founder of the Gazette de France.[344]
  • Giles Romilly (1916–1967), British journalist, Nazi POW, nephew of Winston Churchill.[73]
  • John Merry Sage (1837–1926), British journalist
  • Louise Weiss (1893–1983), French journalist and politician, international affairs expert and pacifist. She was the daughter of an Alsatian Protestant mining engineer and philanthropist, Paul Louis Weiss (1867–1945), and a Jewish mother.[374][375]
  • Peregrine Worsthorne (1923–2020), British journalist.[73]

Lawyers

  • Charles Ancillon (1659–1715), French jurist, diplomat.[376]
  • Emile Arnaud, lawyer, coined the term, "pacifism",[377] president de la Ligue internationale de la Paix et de la Liberté fondée.[378][379] Key work: L'Organisation de la paix.[380][381][382][383]
  • John Bosanquet (1773–1847), English judge.[265][266]
  • Samuel Bosanquet (1768 –1843), Justice of the Peace, Sheriff of Monmouth.[384][265][385]
  • Samuel Richard Bosanquet (1800–1882), English barrister and writer on legal, social and theological subjects. (Key work: The First Seal: Short Homilies on the Gospel According to St. Matthew.)[384][265]
  • Jean Carbonnier (1908–2003), jurist, father of Marianne Carbonnier-Burkard, converted from Roman Catholicism to Protestantism.[386]
  • Warder Cresson (1798–1860), American writer, first US consul to Jerusalem, convert from Quakerism to Judaism, had Huguenot ancestors.[387]
  • John de Villiers, 1st Baron de Villiers (1842–1914), Chief Justice of the Cape of Good Hope.[42][388]
  • Anne Dubourg, lawyer, parliamentarian, first member of the nobility to be martyred.[389]
  • John Jay (1745–1829), first Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court, descendant of Mary Van Cortlandt and Pierre Jay, a merchant from Poitou.[390][391]
  • Charles Layard (1849–1915), English chief justice of Ceylon.[75]
  • Peter Manigault (1731–1773), attorney, plantation owner and slave owner, wealthiest man in North America at the time of his death, descended from the Manigault family of La Rochelle.[392]
  • André Philip (1902–1970), lawyer, Christian socialist.[393]
  • Frederic Ouvry (1814–1881) lawyer for Charles Dickens, antiquary.[394]
  • John Romilly (1802–1874), English judge.[395]
  • Anton Friedrich Justus Thibaut (1772–1840), German jurist.[396]
  • John Silvester (1745–1822), lawyer, son of Sir John Baptist Silvester (doctor at the French Hospital).[397][398]
  • Robert Percy Smith(1770–1845), British lawyer, Member of Parliament, and Judge Advocate-General of Bengal, India, brother of Sydney Smith, descended from the Olier family.[399]
  • William Teulon Swan Stallybrass (1883–1948), British Barrister, Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford.[400]
  • Friedrich Carl von Savigny (1779–1861), German jurist.[401]
  • Alfred Wills (1828–1912), British justice.[42]

Librarians

  • Élie Bouhéreau (1643–1719), Dublin librarian, from La Rochelle.[402][403][404]
  • Andrew Ducarel (1713–1785), librarian, antiquarian.[405]
  • Anton Philipp Reclam (1807–1896), German librarian, publisher and founder of the Universalbibliothek.[406][407]

Linguists, lexicographers and semioticians

  • Roland Barthes (1915–1980), literary theorist and semiotician, Marxist[408][409] atheist from a Protestant family.[312][310]
  • Ferdinand de Saussure (1857–1913), linguist and semiotician, whose mother was from a wealthy Protestant banking family, and whose father's family consisted of a long line of Huguenot academics who had fled to Geneva to escape persecution.[410]
  • Michael Maittaire (1668–1747), linguist.[212]
  • Paul Passy (1859–1940), linguist, Social Christianity advocate, lived according to 'primitive Christian' ideals, son of the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Frédéric Passy.[411]
  • Peter Mark Roget (1779–1869), lexicographer, creator of Roget's Thesaurus, physician.[289]
  • Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767–1835), German linguist.[412][413]

Martyrs and victims of persecution

  • Claude Brousson (1647–1698), martyr, pastor and pacifist.[414][415]
  • Bugnette (first name unknown) (died 1572), pastor, martyr, (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[416]
  • Jean Calas (1698–1762), martyr.[417]
  • Guido de Brès (died 1567), pastor, martyr of Valenciennes, incarcerated in sewage for six weeks before being executed.[418][419][420]
  • Gaspard II de Coligny (1519–1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre), Huguenot leader.[421][422]
    Gaspard II de Coligny
  • Jean de Ferrières, Vidame de Chartres (1520–1586), French nobleman, martyr who died in prison galley.[423]
  • Pierre de la Place (died 1572), duke, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[424]
  • François III de La Rochefoucauld (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[425]
  • Charles de Quellenec (1548–1572), baron of Pont-l'Abbé, first husband of Catherine de Parthenay, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[426]
  • Charles de Téligny (1535–1572), French diplomat, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre), first husband of Louise de Coligny.[427][428]
  • Anne du Bourg (1530–1559), martyr, magistrate, counsellor of France.[429]
  • Marie Durand (1711–1776), from Bouchet du Pransles in Vivarais, prisoner of conscience (Tower of Constance). Key work: Lettres de Marie Durand (1711–1776): Prisonnière à la Tour de Constance de 1730 à 1768.[430][431][432]
  • Pierre Durand (1700–1732) martyr, pastor.[433]
  • Jean Goujon (1510–1572), sculptor, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[424]
  • La Renaudie (died 1560), pseudonym for aristocrat, conspirator, martyr (Amboise Conspiracy).[434]
  • Jean Marteilhe (1684–1777), from Bergerac, prisoner of conscience (galley slave) and memoirist. Key work: The Huguenot Galley-Slave: Being the Autobiography of a French Protestant Condemned to the Galleys for the Sake of His Religion.[435]
  • Gabriel Maturin, left crippled by twenty-six years' confinement in the Bastille,[212] ancestor of clergyman and author, Charles Maturin.[436]
  • Petrus Ramus (1515–1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre), philosopher.[437]
  • Jean Ribault (1520–1565), early colonizer of America, he and other Huguenot colonists were massacred by the Spanish for their faith.[438]
  • Pierre-Paul Sirven (1709–1777), victim of persecution.[439]

Military

Missionaries

  • Élie Allégret (1865–1940), French pastor and missionary in Africa and pacifist.[114]
  • Thomas Barclay (1849–1935), Scottish missionary.[478]
  • François Coillard (1834–1904), missionary in Africa for the Paris Evangelical Missionary Society.[479]
  • François Daumas, missionary in Orange Free State, member of the Paris Evangelical Missionary Society.[480]
  • Maurice Leenhardt (1878–1954), missionary, pastor and ethnologist specialising in the Kanak people of New Caledonia.[481][482]
  • Robert Whitaker McAll (1821–1893), Scottish founder of the Popular Evangelical Mission of France, for the Parisian working class and which is still currently in existence.[320]
  • Pierre Stouppe (1690–1760), Huguenot pastor then low church/evangelical Anglican minister, missionary to African-American slaves.[483][484][485]

Pastors and theologians

  • Firmin Abauzit (1679–1767), theologian, philosopher, editor, librarian.[486]
  • Jacques Abbadie (1654–1727), French theologian. Key work: Vindication of the Truth.[487]
  • Pierre Allix (1641–1717), pastor. Key work: Some Remarks Upon the Ecclesiastical History of the Ancient Churches of Piedmont.[488]
  • Moses Amyraut (1596–1664), French theologian, proponent of Amyraldism.[489][490]
  • Madeleine Barot (1909–1995), theologian and pacifist, co-founder of the Cimade.[491]
  • Henry Bidleman Bascom, US Congressional chaplain, Methodist bishop
  • Jacques Basnage (1653–1723), theologian. Key work: Instructions pastorales aux Réformés de France sur l'obéissance due aux souverains.[492]
  • Jacques Bernard (1658–1718), theologian.[493]
  • Charles Bertheau (1660–1732), pastor.[494]
  • Theodore Beza, French theologian. Key work: Treasure of Gospel Truth.[495]
  • Michel Block, pastor, member of the conservative, Biblically faithful group, Les Attestants, and Christian pacifist.[496][497]
  • David Blondel (1691–1655), French clergyman, historian, classical scholar.[498][499]
  • Samuel Bochart (1599–1667), theologian and pacifist. Key work: Geographia Sacra seu Phaleg et Canaan.[500]
  • Marc Boegner (1881–1970), theologian, pastor, ecumenist. Key work: Long Road to Unity: Memories and Anticipations.[501]
  • Laurent du Bois, Boston pastor.[502]
  • David Renaud Boullier (1699–1759), Dutch theologian and pastor, who argued animals have souls. Key work: Essay on the Soul of Beasts.[503]
  • Brother Roger (1915–2005), founder of Taizé, Christian pacifist and ecumenist. Key work: Sources of Taizé: No Greater Love.[504]
  • Harold Browne (1811–1891), English bishop.[505]
  • Pierre Brully, French pastor.[506]
  • Heinrich Bullinger (1504–1575), theologian. Key work: The Decades.[507]
  • Cecil John Cadoux, British theologian and pacifist with Huguenot ancestry. Key work: The Early Christian Attitude To War: a contribution to the history of Christian ethics.[508]
  • John Calvin (1509–1564), French theologian, pastor, and reformer. Key work: Institutes of the Christian Religion.[509][510]
  • Louis Cappel, French clergyman, Hebrew scholar.
  • Sebastian Castellio (1515–1563), theologian, early proponent of freedom of conscience. Key work: Advice to a Desolate France.[511]
  • Daniel Chamier, theologian, ancestor of actor Daniel Craig, co-drafter of the Edict of Nantes.[512][141]
  • George Champagné, Irish, Anglican minister, Canon of Windsor.[513]
  • Guillaume Chartier, theologian and missionary.[514]
  • Richard Chenevix, Irish Anglican bishop, descended from the Chenevix family of Metz, Lorraine.[345]
  • Jean Claude (1619–1687), theologian.[515][516]
  • Athanase Laurent Charles Coquerel (1795–1868), liberal theologian, elected deputy of the Constituent Assembly after the revolution of February 1848.[517]
  • Athanase Josué Coquerel (1820–1875), liberal theologian, co-founder of the Historical Society of French Protestantism. Key work: La Saint-Barthélémy.[518][519]
  • Jacques Couet (1546–1608), pastor.[520]
  • Antoine Court (1695–1760), pastor. Key work: An Historical Memorial of the Most Remarkable Proceedings Against the Protestants in France from 1744-51.[521]
  • Pierre Courthial (1914–2009), pastor and neo-Calvinist theologian, participated in the writing of the Pomeyrol Theses which called for spiritual resistance to Nazism, member of Association Sully, a now-defunct Protestant royalist movement. Key work: From Bible to Bible.[522]
  • Jean Crespin (1520–1572), martyrologist. Key work: Lives of the Martyrs.[523]
  • Oscar Cullmann (1902–1999), theologian and ecumenist.[524]
  • Jean Daillé (1594–1670), French theologian. Key work: Apology for the French Reformed Churches.[525]
  • Lambert Daneau (1530–1590), theologian. Key work: Wonderful Workmanship of the World.[526]
  • Charles Daubuz (1673–1713), pastor, theologian, eschatologist. Key work: A Perpetual Commentary on the Revelation of St. John.[527]
  • Luke de Beaulieu, cleric. Key work: A discourse shewing that Protestants are on the safer side, notwithstanding the uncharitable judgment of their adversaries and that their religion is the surest way to heaven.[528][529]
  • Isaac de Beausobre (1659–1738), pastor.[530]
  • Guillaume de Clermont, pastor, regional synod president.[531][532]
  • Odet de Coligny (1517–1571), former Roman Catholic cardinal, convert to Protestantism.[423][533]
  • Suzanne de Dietrich (1891–1981), theologian, Cimade worker, co-writer of the Pomeyrol Theses and pacifist (French Lutheran).[534]
  • Guillaume de Félice, Comte de Panzutti, French abolitionist, theologian.
  • Jessé de Forest, leader of a group of Walloon-Huguenots who fled Europe due to religious persecutions.
  • Jean de Labadie (1610–1674), Jesuit convert to Calvinism, founder of the pietistic Labadists.[535]
  • Josué de la Place (c. 1596 – 1665 or possibly 1655), pastor and theologian.[536][537][538]
  • Antoine de la Roche Chandieu, Parisian pastor, co-author with Calvin of the Galllican Confession of Faith.[539]
  • Jean Delpech, pastor.[540]
  • Philippe de Mornay (1549–1623), theologian. Key work (likely author): Vindiciae contra tyrannos.[541]
  • Antoine-Noé de Polier de Bottens (1713–1783), theologian.[542]
  • Edmond de Pressensé (1824–1891), student of Alexandre Vinet, theologian, pastor, writer, first president of the Human Rights League, father of Francis de Pressensé. Key work: Jesus Christ : his times, life, and work.[543]
  • Roland de Pury (1907–1979), pastor, anti-Nazi activist, saviour of Jews in World War Two, opponent of the use of torture in the Algerian War and anti-Communist. He is the author of a Cell Journal written during his captivity by the Nazis. He was a signatory of the Pomeyrol Theses.[544][545]
  • Nicolas des Gallars (1520–1580), theologian, pastor at Threadneedle Street.[423]
  • Daniel de Superville (1657–1728), pastor.[546]
  • Charles Drelincourt (1595–1669), pastor. Key work: The Christian's Defence Against the Fears of Death.[547]
  • Laurent Drelincourt (1626–1681), theologian, pastor, poet, son of Charles Drelincourt.[548]
  • Jacob Duché (1737–1798), pastor in Philadelphia, USA.[549]
  • Pierre Du Moulin (1568–1658), pastor. Key works: Tyranny that the Popes Exercised for Some Centuries Over the kings of England and The Christian Combate, or, A treatise of Affliction: with a Prayer and Meditation of the Faithfull Soule.[550]
  • John Durel, pastor who later became an Anglican minister.[2]
  • Theodore Dury (Du Ry) (born 1661), pastor.[551]
  • Jacques Ellul (1912–1994), theologian and pacifist. Key work: Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes.[552][553]
  • Tommy Fallot (1844–1904), pastor, founder of Social Christianity. Key work: Christianisme social, études et fragments (French Lutheran).[554][482]
  • William Farel (1489–1565), theologian who recruited Calvin to Geneva.[555]
  • Abraham Faure (1795–1875), South African pastor and author.[166]
  • Jacques Fontaine, pastor in Cork, weaver, fisherman.[556]
  • Johann Heinrich Samuel Formey (1711–1797), Huguenot pastor, journaqlist, author, educator, secretary of the Berlin Academy of Science, man of letters, theologian and historian.[557][558]
  • Gaston Frommel (1862–1906), French theologian.[559][560][561]
  • Jacques Gaillard, pastor and theologian.[562]
  • John Gano, Baptist preacher and Revolutionary War chaplain.
  • John Gast (1715–1788), Irish minister.[563][564]
  • François Gaussen (1790–1863), pastor and eschatologist,[565] Calvinist who was influential on the early Seventh Day Adventists.[566] Key works: Theopneusty; Or, the Plenary Inspiration of the Holy Scriptures and The Prophet Daniel Explained. In a Series of Readings for Young Persons.[567]
  • Simon Goulart (1543–1628), pastor, theologian and poet.[568]
  • Rémi Gounelle (1967–), theologian, nephew of André Gounelle.[569]
  • Heinrich Grüber (1891–1975), theologian, opponent of Nazism and pacifist.[570]
  • François Hotman (1524–1590), theologian. Key work: Francogallia.[571][572]
  • Pierre Jurieu, French pastor, orthodox Calvinist theologian[573] and eschatologist. Key work: Pastoral Letters.[574]
  • Isaac La Peyrère (1596–1676), theologian, writer and lawyer, forced to convert to Roman Catholicism, retract his writings and spend his final years in a monastery.[575]
  • Jean Lasserre (1908–1983), conservative, Biblically orthodox theologian, pastor and pacifist. Key work: War and the Gospel[576][577]
  • Charles Layard (1750–1803), English clergyman.[75]
  • Auguste Lecerf (1872–1943), pastor, neo-Calvinist theologian, specialist on the thought of Jean Calvin, member of Association Sully, a now-defunct Protestant royalist movement. Key work: An Introduction to Reformed Dogmatics.[578][579]
  • Jean Le Clerc (1657–1736), theologian, journalist and man of letters.[580]
  • Robert Le Maçon seigneur de la Fontaine, pastor, Threadneedle Street.[423]
  • Andrew Le Mercier (1692–1764), pastor and writer.
  • Paul Lorrain (died 1719), secretary to Samuel Pepys, ordinary of Newgate Prison
  • Andrew Lortie, theologian.
  • Francina Susanna Louw, missionary, linguist, sister of South African president C. F. Malan and descendant of Jacques Malan of Provence.[373]
  • Antoine Marcourt, pastor (the Posters Incident).[581]
  • Paul-Henri Marron (1754–1832), first pastor to work in Paris after Protestantism was legalised because of the French Revolution.[582][583]
  • Jacques Martin (1906–2001), pastor, pacifist, pioneer French conscientous objector, saviour of Jews in World War Two.[584][585]
  • Joseph Martin-Paschoud (1802–1873), liberal pastor, pacifist, supporter of Frédéric Passy's peace society, supporter of French Judaism.[586]
  • Basil Maturin, Anglican minister and writer who later converted to Roman Catholicism, Lusitania torpedoeing victim, grandson of Charles Maturin.[436]
  • Gabriel Maturin (1700–1746), Irish clergyman and philanthropist[587]
  • Jacques Maury (1920–2020), pastor, president of the French Protestant Federation.[588]
  • Pierre Maury (1890–1956), pastor.[589]
  • Pierre Merlin (died 1603), chaplain to Coligny, later pastor at La Rochelle and synod head.[590][591]
  • Eugène Ménégoz (1838–1921), symbolo-fideist,liberal theologian (French Lutheran), anti-pacifist and promoter of Just War Theory.[592][593]
  • Caesar de Missy (1703–1775), pastor, Savoy, London, chaplain to King George III.[26]
  • Adolphe Monod (1802–1856), pastor.[594][595]
  • Frédéric Monod (1794–1863), pastor.[596]
  • Wilfred Monod (1867–1943), liberal theologian, Social Christianity supporter, founder of the Order of Watchers, argued for rehabilitation of Marcion and for the removal of omnipotence and omnipresence from the conception of God.[597]
  • Pierre Mouchon (1733–1797), pastor and grandfather of journalist and social worker, Eugénie Niboyet.[598]
  • Andrew Murray, South African, pastor, teacher and writer, Huguenot descendant on his mother's side.[599]
  • Wolfgang Musculus (1497–1563), theologian.[600]
  • Beyers Naudé, South African anti-apartheid cleric.[166]
  • Jozua Francois Naudé (1873–1948), South African pastor, school founder and co-founder of the Afrikaner Broederbond.[166]
  • Elias Neau, Former galley slave, opponent of slavery in the United States, school founder.[601]
  • Samuel Nevill (1837–1921), the first Anglican Bishop of Dunedin and, later, Primate of New Zealand.[336]
  • Claude Pajon (1626–1685), pastor.[602]
  • Elias Palairet (1713–1765), brother of Jean Palairet, passtor successively at the French church at Greenwich, Saint John's Church, Spitalfields, and the Dutch chapel at Saint James's, Westminster, classical and Biblical philologist.[317]
  • Félix Pécaut (1828–1898), pastor and educator.[603]
  • Simon Pelloutier (1694–1757), French pastor in Berlin.[604]
  • Jean Pradel, pastor.[605]
  • Samuel Provoost (1742–1815), American clergyman.
  • Paul Rabaut (1718–1794), pastor.[606][607]
  • Jacques Reclus (1796–1882), pastor.[318]
  • Charles Renouvier, theologian.[608]
  • Albert Réville (1826–1906), pastor, extreme liberal theologian, Dreyfus supporter.[609][610]
  • Pierre Richier (c. 1506–1580), French theologian and missionary.[611]
  • André Rivet (1572–1651), theologian.[612]
  • Albert Rivett (1855–1934), Australian Congregationalist minister and pacifist, father of the scientist, David Rivett.[613][614]
  • William Romaine (1714–1795), evangelical Anglican minister. Key work: The Life, Walk and Triumph of Faith.[615]
  • Pierre Roques (1685–1748), pastor.[616]
  • Auguste Sabatier (1839–1901), symbolofideist, called by some "the greatest French theologian since Calvin", expert on dogma and the links between theology and culture (French Lutheran).[617]
  • Jacques Saurin (1677–1730), pastor, Threadneedle Street and the Netherlands refugee communities, early advocate of religious tolerance. Key work: Sermons on Diverse Texts of the Scriptures.[618][619]
  • Edmond Scherer (1815–1889), liberal theologian, agnostic.[620]
  • Laurent Schlumberger (1957–), first President of the United Protestant Church of France from 2013 to 2017.[621]
  • Albert Schweitzer (1875–1965), liberal/unorthodox theologian and pastor,[622] missionary, hospital founder, organist, musicologist, writer, humanitarian, philosopher, physician, had pacifist leanings,[623] Nobel Peace Prize winner 1953, Lutheran from Alsace.[624][625]
  • Jules Siegfried, pastor and pacifist.[626]
  • Sydney Smith (1771–1845), Essex-born Anglican minister and humorist, founder of the Edinburgh Review, lecturer at the Royal Institution and remembered for his comical rhyming recipe for salad dressing, descendant of Olier family.[399]
  • Charles Spurgeon (1834–1892), first pastor of the Metropolitan Tabernacle, founder of a theological college, almshouses and orphanage, writer.[627]
  • Charles Terrot (1790–1872), Scottish Episcopalian minister, theologian and mathematician.[336]
  • Albert Thibaudet, pastor, pacifist.[393]
  • Daniel Toussain (1541–1602), pastor, Basel.[551]
  • André Trocmé (1901–1971), French Biblically conservative but socially progressive[628] pastor, Christian pacifist, saviour of Jews in World War Two and anti-nuclear campaigner. Key work: Jesus and the Nonviolent Revolution.[629][630][631]
  • Alexandre Vinet (1797–1847), theologian, considered the most important thinker of nineteenth century French-speaking Protestantism. Key work: Homiletics; or the Theory of Preaching.[632]
  • Pierre Viret (1511–1572), theologian. Key work: Thou Shalt Not Kill.[633]
  • Charles Wagner (1852–1918), pastor, liberal theologian, Social Christianity advocate.[554]

Philanthropists and charity workers

  • Madeleine Barot (1909–1995), laywoman, saviour of Jews in World War Two, co-writer of the Pomeyrol Theses, evangelist, ecumenist, vice-president of Christian Action for the Abolition of Torture, general secretary of La Cimade.[634][545]
  • John Bost (1817–1881), pastor, musician and philanthropist, founder of La Famille (the Family) asylum at La Force in Dordogne for children, orphans, the disabled and incurables. It was followed by a number of other asylums, run today by the John Bost Foundation.[635][636]
  • Antoinette Butte (1898–1986), French Girl Scouts co-founder.[637]
  • Suzanne Curchod (1737–1794), hospital founder, writer and salonist, wife of Jacques Necker.[638][639]
  • Guillaume de Clermont, psator and director of the John Bost Foundation.[626]
  • Jacques de Gastigny (died 1708), master of the royal buckhounds, philanthropist whose bequest was used to found the London French Hospital.[2]
  • Pierre de La Primaudaye, a governor of the London French Hospital.[640]
  • Malcolm Delevingne (1868–1950), Barnado's charity worker, occupational health and safety and anti-drug advocate, public servant.[641]
  • Marguerite de Witt-Schlumberger (1853–1924), philanthropist and non-violent resistor to German rule in Alsace.[642]
  • Jenny d'Héricourt (1809–1875), French social activist and midwife.[643]
  • Henri Dunant (1828–1910), founder of the Red Cross, Nobel Peace Prize winner.[644]
  • Jane Franklin (1791–1875), wife of Sir John Franklin, First Lady of Tasmania, philanthropist, patron of the arts, descended from the Griffin and Guillemard silkweaving families.[21][645][646]
  • Daniel Legrand (1783–1858), philanthropist and industrialist, grandfather of Tommy Fallot.[647]
  • Philippe Ménard, founder of the London French Hospital.[648]
  • Sarah Monod (1836–1912), philanthropist and feminist, daughter of Adolphe Monod.[649]
  • Felix Neff (1798–1829), pastor and philanthropist.[650]
  • Eugénie Niboyet (1796–1883), French social worker, journalist, founder of continental Europe's first avowedly pacifist newspaper, La Paix de Deux Mondes, granddaughter of pastor Pierre Mouchon and the physicist Georges-Louis Le Sage, philanthropist, feminist, imperialist and writer. Key work: De la nécessité d'abolir la peine de mort (The necessity to abolish the death penalty).[651][652][653][654]
  • J. F. Oberlin (1740–1826), pastor, philanthropist and social reformer (French Lutheran).[655]
  • Robert Lewis Roumieu (1814–1877), British architect, governor of the Foundling Hospital, London; honorary architect and director of the French Hospital, co-founder of the Huguenot Society of which he was treasurer and later president.[656][657][25]
  • Magda Trocmé (1901–1996), laywoman, wife of André Trocmé, saviour of Jews in World War Two, anti-nuclear activist.[658][659][660]
  • Randolph Vigne (1928–2016), South African, President of the Huguenot Society of Great Britain, editor of its publications, director and treasurer of the French Hospital of London, Huguenot researcher and contributor to various publications on Huguenot history.[661][662]

Philosophers

  • Charles Andler (1866–1934), philosopher, pacifist.[393]
  • Pierre Bayle (1647–1706), French philosopher.[663][664]
  • Jean Cavaillés, philosopher, pacifist.[393][665]
  • Jacques Maritain (1882–1973), philosopher from Protestant family, converted to Roman Catholicism, drafter of Universal Declaration of Human Rights.[666]
  • James Martineau (1805–1900), English philosopher, educator, Unitarian minister, descended from Gaston Martineau, a Huguenot surgeon and refugee.[667]
  • Paul Ricœur (1913–2005), philosopher and pacifist.[668]
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778), Swiss writer, philosopher, social and educational theorist, descended from Huguenot wine merchant, Didier Rousseau, Jean-Jacques converted to an unorthodox form of Calvinism himself,[669] rejecting original sin and some other key tenets of mainstream Calvinist faith.[670][671]
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • Théodore Eugène César Ruyssen (1868–1967), philosopher and pacifist, president of Peace Through Law.[393][672]

Pioneers and explorers

  • Charles Bonney (1813–1897), Australian pioneer.[21]
  • William Byrd I (1652–1704), early Virginia settler.
  • Samuel de Champlain (1567–1635), French explorer, founded Québec City, born into a Huguenot family, died a Roman Catholic
  • Guillaume Chartier, theologian, French Antarctique colonist.[673]
  • Louis Cordier (1777–1861), South African pioneer.
  • Augustine Courtauld (1904–1959), British Arctic explorer.[674]
  • Davy Crockett (1786–1836), American folk hero and the descendant of one Monsieur de la Croquetagne, a captain in the Royal Guard of French King Louis XIV, whose family converted to Protestantism, fled France and settled in the north of Ireland.[675]
  • Philippe de Corguilleray, colonist, French Antarctique.[676]
  • Louis de Freycinet, French explorer.[677]
  • Louis Dubois (1626–1696), colonist to New Netherland, co-founded New Paltz, New York, ancestor of Hollywood actors Marlon Brando and Joan Crawford, from Artois.[678]
  • Pierre Du Gua, Sieur de Monts (1558–1628), French colonizer of Canada.[679]
  • Ralph Durand (1876–1945), explorer.[680]
  • Mareen Duvall (1625–1694), early Maryland settler originally from Nantes, ancestor of Wallis Simpson and actor Robert Duvall.[681][682]
  • Tobias Furneaux (1735–1781), British explorer, charted coastal areas of Tasmania.[363]
  • René Goulaine de Laudonnière (1529–1574), French explorer.[683]
  • Jean de Léry (1536–1613), pastor and explorer of Brazil. Key work: History of a voyage to the land of Brazil (1578).[684]
  • Meriwether Lewis (1774–1809), American explorer.[685]
  • Charles Marais, South African pioneer.[686]
  • Nicolas Martiau (1591–1657), American pioneer.[687][688]
  • Jacques Mouton, South African pioneer.[686]
  • Daniel Perrin (1642–1719), one of the first permanent European inhabitants of Staten Island, New York originally from Normandy, ancestor of American actress Valerie Perrine.[689]
  • Pierre Richier (1506–1580), pastor, French Antarctique colonist, later took lead role in turning La Rochelle into a leading Huguenot centre.[690]
  • Pierre Rousseau, South African pioneer, from Blois.[691]
  • Abraham Salle (1670–1719), immigrant and American colonist.
  • Aaron Sherritt, Anglo-Irish Protestant of Huguenot descent, anti-Catholic, Australian colonial pioneer, victim of police manipulation,[388] murder victim (Kelly Gang).[692]
  • Jedediah Smith, American explorer, mountain man
  • Pierre de Villiers, South African pioneer.[460]

Politicians

Printers and booksellers

Privateers

Royalty

Scientists and engineers

Sportspeople

Translators

  • Sarah Austin (1793–1867), translator of German language books who did much to make Germany familiar to English readers.[297]
  • Pierre Coste (1668–1747), translator, member of the Rainbow Coffee House Group.[2][317]
  • Marie De Cotteblanche (1520–1583), French noblewoman known for her skill in languages and translation of works from Spanish to French.[844]
  • John Theophilus Desaguliers (1683–1744), translator, major figure in British Freemasonry, natural philosopher, clergyman, engineer, was elected to the Royal Society in 1714 as experimental assistant to Isaac Newton, born in La Rochelle.[2][845]
  • Claudius Hollyband (1534–1594), translator, from Moulins.[2]
  • Peter Anthony Motteux (1663–1718), translator, journalist and dramatist.[846][847][848]
  • Lewis Page Mercier (1820–1875), British translator of Jules Verne into English, reverend, grandson of a Louis Mercier who was pastor at Threadneedle Street.[849]

Weavers and textile manufacturers

Writers

  • Alfred Ainger (1837–1904), English writer and humorist, evangelical Anglican minister, honorary chaplain to Queen Victoria.[857]
  • Willibald Alexis (1798–1871), German writer. Key work: Der Werwulf.[858]
  • Samuel Beckett (1906–1989), Irish novelist and playwright. Key work: Waiting for Godot.[859][860]
  • John Bulteel (c. 1627–1692), writer.[861]
  • Jan F. E. Celliers, South African poet, essayist, dramatist and reviewer.[166]
  • Frederick Chamier (1796–1870), British novelist. Key work: Ben Brace.[212]
  • George Chamier, Australian author.[862][863]
  • André Chamson (1900–1983), novelist and pacifist, President of PEN International from 1956 to 1959. Key work: Roux le Bandit.[864][865]
  • Samuel Chappuzeau (1625–1701), French author, poet and playwright. Key work: Le Cercle des Femmes.[866]
  • Jacques Chardonne (real name Jacques Boutelleau) (1884–1968), writer. Key work: Les Destinées Sentimentales.[312]
  • Tracy Chevalier (1962–), American-British novelist. Key work: Girl with a Pearl Earring.[115]
  • Valentin Conrart (1603–1675), writer.[344]

Charles J. Fourie

  • Benjamin Constant (1767–1830), Swiss writer. Key work: Adolphe.[867]
  • Agrippa d'Aubigné (1552–1630), French poet.[868]
  • Eustorg de Beaulieu, writer. Key work: Songs and coats of arms.[869]
  • Louis de Bernières, English writer. Key work: Captain Corelli's Mandolin.[870][871][872]
  • Gabriel de Foigny, French writer. Key work: Terres Australes.[873]
  • Evalena Fryer Hedley (1865–1943), journalist, editor, and author[874]
  • Walter De La Mare (1873–1956), English poet and novelist. Key work: The Return.[875]
  • Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué (1777–1843), German author, grandson of Heinrich August de la Motte Fouqué. Key work: Undine.[876]
  • Pierre de La Primaudaye (1546–1619), French writer. Key work: L'Academie Française.[877]
  • François de La Rochefoucauld (1613–1680), author. His great-grandfather François III, count de La Rochefoucauld, was killed in the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre. Key work: Maxims.[878]
  • Anne de La Roche-Guilhem (1644–1707), novelist.[640]
  • Jean de La Taille, playwright. Key work: From the Art of Tragedy.[869]
  • Georgette de Montenay (1540–1607), poet.[879][880][844]
  • Marie Dentière (1495–1561), writer, theologian.[880][881][844]
  • Catherine de Parthenay (1554–1631), poet, playwright and mathematician, mother of Henri de Rohan.[882]
  • Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas (1544–1590), French poet and courtier.[883][312]
  • Pierre des Maizeaux (1666–1745), author and translator, member of the Rainbow Coffee House Group.[884][317]
  • Jean de Sponde (1557–1595), poet, later converted to Roman Catholicism.[312]
  • Germaine de Staël (1766–1817), writer, daughter of Jacques Necker.[885]
  • Théophile de Viau (1590–1626), poet, playwright, convicted blasphemer, atheist born to a Huguenot family, committed suicide.[886][887]
  • Daphne du Maurier (1907–1989), English writer. Key work: Rebecca.[836][888]
  • George du Maurier (1834–1896), English author, Punch cartoonist. Key work: Trilby.[73]
  • Guy du Maurier (1865–1915), playwright, son of George du Maurier and uncle of Daphne du Maurier.[889]
  • I. D. du Plessis (1900–1981), South African poet, member of the Dertigers group.[167][166]
  • Totius (poet) (Jacob Daniël du Toit) (1877–1953), South African poet, Apartheid advocate.[166]
  • Wilhelmina FitzClarence (1830–1906), English author.
  • Ian Fleming (1908–1964), British writer, Huguenot ancestry on his mother's side.[890]
  • Theodor Fontane (1819–1898), German novelist, poet. Key work: Effi Briest.[891]
    Theodor Fontane
  • Philip Morin Freneau, American poet
  • André Gide (1869–1951), French author, Nobel Prize winner. Key work: La Symphonie Pastorale.[892][893]
  • Christian Giudicelli (1942–2022), French novelist and literary critic, mother was a Protestant from Nîmes.[894]
  • Henriette Guizot de Witt (1829–1908), novelist, daughter of François Guizot. Key work: Légendes et récits pour la jeunesse.[895]
  • Dashiell Hammett (1894–1961), American author, Marxist, descended from the De Schiells family. Key work: The Maltese Falcon.[19][896]
  • Maurice Hewlett (1861–1923), British novelist.[897]
  • DuBose Heyward (1885–1940), American novelist, playwright, librettist.[898]
  • Françoise Marguerite Janiçon (1711–1789), writer.[899]
  • Elsa Joubert, South African novelist.[900][166]
  • William Larminie, Irish poet.[901]
  • Sheridan Le Fanu (1814–1873), Irish writer, Le Fanu family from Caen in Normandy. Key work: Uncle Silas.[902][903]
  • Madeleine L'Engle, American author. Key work: A Wrinkle in TIme.[904][905]
  • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet
  • Pierre Loti (real name Louis Marie Julian Viaud) (1850–1923), French Orientalist writer. Key work: An Iceland Fisherman.[906][907]
  • D. F. Malherbe, South African novelist.[166]
  • Harriet Martineau (1802–1876), English novelist and travel writer, educational and economic reformer, sociologist, atheist and advocate of Darwinian evolution, descended from a Huguenot family.[45][908]
  • Charles Maturin (1780–1824), Irish Gothic writer and Church of Ireland clergyman, descendant of Huguenot and crippled Bastille prisoner, Gabriel Maturin. Key work: Melmoth the Wanderer.[587][436]
  • Edward Maturin (1812–1881), writer, son of Charles Maturin.[587]
  • Kate Mosse, English author. Key work: The Burning Chambers.[909]
  • Edith Olivier (1872–1948), British novelist, Christian, Conservative Party activist, opponent of Suffragette movement, founder of Wiltshire branch of Women's Land Army in 1916, daughter of the Dean of Wiltshire and related to Sir Laurence Olivier. Key work: The Love Child.[910][911]
  • Tom Paulin, British poet, critic.
  • James Planché, British dramatist, officer of arms
  • Damon Runyon (1880–1946), American author. Key work: Guys and Dolls.[19]
  • Lou Andreas Salomé (1861–1937), Russian novelist and psychoanalyst.[912]
  • Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980), author and philosopher, atheist born to Huguenot family. Key work: The Age of Reason.[765]
  • Jean Schlumberger (1877–1968), French novelist. Key work: The Unfaithful Friend.[642]
  • Mary Shelley, English writer, daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft. Key work: Frankenstein.[913]
  • Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862), American writer.[19]
  • Dorothea Viehmann (1755–1816), German storyteller, source for the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm.[914]
  • Louise von François (1817–1893), Prussian novelist, member of the Huguenot nobility-descended von François family. Key work: The Last Lady of Reckenburg.[915]
  • Gertrud von le Fort (1876–1971), German writer.[916]
  • Malwida von Meysenbug (1816–1903), German writer, Nobel Prize for Literature nominee. Key work: Memories of an Idealist.[917]
  • Ernst von Salomon (1902–1972), novelist, screenwriter, Freikorps fighter, far-right figure.[918]
  • Evelyn Waugh (1903–1966), author, Roman Catholic with Huguenot ancestry.[919]
  • Edith Wharton (1862–1937), American novelist, had a Huguenot great-great-grandfather, who came from the French Palatinate to participate in the founding of New Rochelle. Key work:Age of Innocence.[920]
  • John Greenleaf Whittier (1807–1892), American poet and advocate of the abolition of slavery.[19]
  • Laura Ingalls Wilder (1867–1957), American writer. Key work: Little House on the Prairie.[230]
  • Rose Wilder Lane (1886–1968), American writer and libertarian, daughter of Laura Ingalls Wilder. Key work: Let the Hurricane Roar (later retitled Young Pioneers).[230]
  • Tennessee Williams (real name Thomas Lanier Williams) (1911–1983), American playwright, descended from the Sevier family. Key work: A Streetcar Named Desire.[921][922]
  • Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–1797), English writer. Key work: Maria: or, The Wrongs of Woman.[913]

Other

  • Sophie Blanchard (1778–1819), female hot air balloon pioneer, aeronautics advisor to Napoleon Bonaparte, first woman to die in an aviation disaster.[923]
  • Idelette Calvin (1506–1549), wife of Jean Calvin.[924][925][926]
  • Valentin Conrart (1603–1675), secretary to the King and man of letters.[927]
  • Countess Elisabeth of Nassau, French-Dutch noblewoman.[928]
  • John Debrett (1753–1822), publisher, founder of Debrett's, a compiler of reference books on the peerage, etiquette, lists of influential people and so forth, son of Jean Louys de Bret, a cook with Huguenot ancestry.[929]
  • Marie de La Tour d'Auvergne (1601–1665), French noblewoman.[930][931]
  • Charlotte de Laval (1530–1568), noblewoman, wife of Gaspard de Coligny.[932]
  • Alfred Dupont, draper.[933]
  • Charles J. Guiteau (1841–1882), US presidential assassin.[934][935]
  • Camille Seydoux (1982–), fashion stylist, sister of Léa Seydoux.[936]

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