List of Huguenots

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

Actors and film-makers

Architects

Artists

Chefs

Doctors and medical practitioners

Educationalists

Entrepreneurs and businesspeople

Farmers

Geographers

  • Élie Reclus (1827–1904), ethnographer and anarchist, son of Pastor Jacques Reclus.[249]
  • Élisée Reclus (1830–1905), geographer and anarchist, son of Pastor Jacques Reclus.[249]
  • Onésime Reclus (1837–1916), geographer, son of Pastor Jacques Reclus.[249]
  • Armand Reclus (1843–1927), geographer and explorer, son of Pastor Jacques Reclus.[249]
  • John Rocque (1705-1762), cartographer, specialised in mapping of gardens, created plans of British towns and pioneering road guides for travellers.[250]
  • Mary Ann Rocque (1725-1770), cartographer, wife of John Rocque, daughter of the Scalé family.[251]

Historians

  • Ernest-Charles Babut (1875-1916), historian specialising in early Christianity, son of Pastor Charles-Édouard Babut.[252][253]
  • Jean Baubérot (1941-), historian.[254]
  • Elie Benoist (1640-1728), historian of the Edict of Nantes, pastor.[255]
  • Eugène Bersier (1831-1889), vice-president of the Société d'Histoire du Protestantisme Français, pastor, church unifier, church founder, school founder.[256][257]
  • Maximilien de Béthune, duc de Sully (1560–1641), memoirist. Key work: Économies royales.[246][258]
  • Patrick Cabanel (1961-), historian.[259]
  • 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.[260]
  • Bernard Cottret (1951–2020), historian.[261]
  • Jean Norton Cru (1879-1949), historian of the First World War, anti-war activist, literature teacher, pastor's son. Key work: Témoins.[262]
  • Jean-Henri Merle d'Aubigné (1794-1872), historian and pastor, descendant of Agrippa d'Aubigné. Key work: Discourse on the History of Christianity.[263][264]
  • François de la Noue (1531–1591), memoirist.[246]
  • Lancelot Voisin de La Popelinière (1541–1608), historian.[265]
  • Paul de Rapin (1661-1725), historian. Key work: History of England.[266]
  • Gédéon Tallement des Réaux (1619–1690), memoirist.[246]
  • Jean de Serres (1540–1598), historian, political advisor and pastor.[267]
  • G.E.M. de Ste. Croix (1910–2000), British Marxist historian and atheist, paternal lineage was Huguenot.[268]
  • Charlotte Duplessis-Mornay (1550–1606), memoirist, wife of Philippe de Mornay. Key work: Memories of Philippe de Mornay[269]
  • André Encrevé (1942-), historian.[270][271]
  • Jean Pierre Erman (1735–1814), historian and pastor in the French Church of Berlin.[272]
  • James Fontaine, memoirist. Key work: Memoirs of a Huguenot Family.[273]
  • François Guizot (1787–1874), French historian, statesman. Key work: History of France.[274]
  • Auguste Himly (1823–1906), French historian and geographer.[275]
  • Jules Michelet (1798-1874), historian.[276]
  • Jean Migault, memoirist from Poitou. Key work: Jean Migault: Or, the Trials of a French Protestant Family, During the Period of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes.[277][278]
  • Gabriel Monod (1844–1912), historian, Dreyfus supporter.[279]
  • Napoléon Peyrat (1809–1881), pastor and historian.[280]
  • E. Constantin Privat (1900–1976), president of the German Huguenot Society from 1950–1971.[281]
  • Frank Puaux (1844–1922), historian, pastor and museum founder.[282]
  • Charles Read (1819–1898), historian.[283]
  • Pierre Christian Frédéric Reclam (1741–1789), historian and pastor in the French Church of Berlin.[284]
  • Jean-Pierre Richardot (1929-2021), historian and journalist.[285]
  • Joseph Justus Scaliger (1540–1609), historian, creationist and chronologer. Key work: Manilius.[286]
  • Charles Seignobos (1854–1942), historian.[287]
  • Melesina Trench (1768-1827), Irish diarist, granddaughter of Bishop Richard Chenevix, descended from the Chenevix family of Metz, Lorraine.[288]

Jewellers, clockmakers and craftsmen

Journalists

Lawyers

  • Charles Ancillon (1659–1715), French jurist, diplomat.[337]
  • Richard Béringuier (1854–1916), lawyer and joint-founder of the German Huguenot Society.[338]
  • Raoul Biville (1863-1909), jurist, law professor, Christian Socialist colleague of Paul Passy, President of the Society for the Evangelization of Normandy.[339][340]
  • Jean Carbonnier (1908–2003), jurist, father of Marianne Carbonnier-Burkard, converted from Roman Catholicism to Protestantism.[341]
  • Germain Colladon, jurist.[171]
  • Léon Colladon, jurist.[171]
  • Warder Cresson (1798–1860), American writer, first US consul to Jerusalem, convert from Quakerism to Judaism, had Huguenot ancestors.[342]
  • Gustave Fornier de Clausonne(1797-1873), magistrate, member of the Nîmes Consistory, chairman of the French Bible Society.[343]
  • Jean-Jacques de Félice, lawyer, human rights activist, Cimade board member.[344]
  • Laurent de Normandie (1520–1569), lawyer.[171]
  • John Jay (1745–1829), first Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court, descendant of Mary Van Cortlandt and Pierre Jay, a merchant from Poitou.[345][346]
  • Pierre Patrick Kaltenbach, barrister, French Audit Bureau, founded network of Protestant family associations, member of La Force charity.[347]
  • John Lekeux, lawyer, Spitalfields.[239]
  • 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.[348]
  • John Romilly (1802–1874), English judge.[349]
  • Anton Friedrich Justus Thibaut (1772–1840), German jurist.[350]
  • John Silvester (1745-1822), lawyer, son of Sir John Baptist Silvester (doctor at the French Hospital).[172][173]
  • William Teulon Swan Stallybrass (1883–1948), British Barrister, Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford.[351]
  • Friedrich Karl von Savigny (1779–1861), German jurist.[352]

Linguists, lexicographers and semioticians

  • Roland Barthes (1915–1980), literary theorist and semiotician, Marxist[353][354] atheist from a Protestant family.[246][244]
  • 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.[355]
  • Pierre Encrevé (1939-2019), linguist, brother of André Encrevé, son of a pastor.[356][357]
  • Michael Maittaire (1668-1747), linguist.[224]
  • Paul Passy (1859-1940), linguist, Social Christianity advocate, lived according to 'primitive Christian' ideals, son of the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Frédéric Passy.[358]
  • Peter Mark Roget (1779–1869), lexicographer, creator of Roget's Thesaurus, physician.[216]

Martyrs and victims of persecution

  • Arnaud (first name unknown), from the village of Saint Hypolite, galley slave.[361]
  • Antoine Astrue, galley slave.[362]
  • Jane Baille, of Charollois, imprisoned in convent by a Jesuit for refusing to abjure her faith.[363]
  • Frances Baillet (died 1572), wife of the Queen's goldsmith, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre), some dismembered body parts eaten by dogs, mutilated corpse thrown into a river.[364]
  • Nicolas Ballon (died 1556), executed for possessing a Bible.[365]
  • Jacob Bayle, martyr, died in prison.[366]
  • Beaudisner (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Beauvais (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, governor to the King of Navarre, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Peter Bergier (died 1552), merchant, martyr, burnt at the stake.[368][369]
  • Berny (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Beure (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Blosset (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Bonnet (first name unknown), pastor, wounded, taken prisoner and publicly mocked in Mâcon, 1562.[371][372]
  • Andrew Bosquet, teenage boy sentenced to galley slavery.[362]
  • Francis Bourry, teenage boy sentenced to galley slavery.[362]
  • Madeleine Briçonnet (died 1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Jean Brion (died 1572), governor of the Marquis of Conti, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Claude Brousson (1647–1698), martyr, pastor and pacifist.[373][374]
  • Bugnette (first name unknown) (died 1572), pastor, martyr, (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[371]
  • Jean Calas (1698–1762), martyr.[375]
  • Cauquet (first name unknown) (died 1686), wife of surgeon Samuel Cauquet of Montpellier, martyr, naked and mutilated body exposed in the street, stoned by the public and repeatedly run over by dragonnades' horses.[376]
  • Peter Chantguyon (died 1561), martyr (Massacre of Vassy).[363]
  • Chantguyon (first name unknown) (died 1687), martyr, Vassy, descendant of Peter Chantguyon.[363]
  • Charpentier (first name unknown) (died 1685), from Roufee in Angoumois, martyr, tortured to death by the Dragonnades. His son, Jean Charpentier, a refugee, became pastor in Canterbury.[377]
  • Chemet (first name unknown) (died 1687), martyr, Vassy, brother-in-law of Chantguyon.[363]
  • Paul Chenevix (1606-1686), Dean of the Counsellors of the Parliament of Metz, martyr, executed, body stripped naked and dumped on a dunghill, ancestor of Richard Chenevix and Melesina Trench.[376][378]
  • Peter Crousel (died 1686), martyr, dragged to death by horse.[376]
  • François d'Andelot (1521-1569), imprisoned by Henri II and nearly burnt at the stake, younger brother of Coligny.[379]
  • Guido de Brès (died 1567), pastor, martyr of Valenciennes, incarcerated in sewage for six weeks before being executed.[380][381][382]
  • Antoine de Clermont d'Amboise Marquis de Rénel (died 1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Gaspard II de Coligny (1519–1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre), Huguenot leader.[383][384]
  • Colombiers (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Cornaton (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Charles de Beaumanoir de Lavardin (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • David de Caumont, baron of Montbelon, galley slave.[362]
  • Francis Nompar de Caumont (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Antony de Clermont (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Jean de Ferrières, Vidame de Chartres (1520–1586), French nobleman, martyr who died in prison galley.[385]
  • Stephen de la Forge (died 1534), executed for possessing a Bible.[365]
  • Peregrine de La Grange (died 1567), pastor, martyr of Valenciennes.[386]
  • Pierre de la Place (died 1572), duke, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Francis Delarochefoucauld, escaped from abbey in which he was being held prisoner for forced conversion.[387]
  • Francis de la Rochefoucault (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Antony de Maraffin Lord of Guerchy (died 1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[388]
  • Louis de Marolles, counsellor of the king, galley slave, memoirist. Key work: Histoire des souffrances du bien-heureux martyr Mr. Louis de Marolles.[389][362]
  • Tristan de Moneins (died 1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Samuel De Péchels, victim of persecution by dragonnades, refugee.[390]
  • Charles de Quellenec (1548–1572), baron of Pont-l'Abbé, first husband of Catherine de Parthenay, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[391]
  • Des Gorris (first name unknown) (died 1572), pastor, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[371]
  • Des Pruneaux (first name unknown) (died 1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[388]
  • Charles de Téligny (1535–1572), French diplomat, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre), first husband of Louise de Coligny.[392][393]
  • Guy de Vicose Baron de La Court, heavily persecuted by the dragonnades, later a director and, eventually, the Governor, of the London French Hospital.[121]
  • Sebastian de Villettes lord of Montledier, country gentleman, heavily persecuted during the Revocation.[121]
  • N. Dives (first name unknown) (died 1572), pastor, martyr, killed in Lyons (in the wake of the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[371]
  • Anne du Bourg (1530–1559), martyr, magistrate, counsellor of France.[394]
  • Jean du Bourg, draper, publicly mocked, had his hand cut off and martyred for posting anti-mass placards.[395]
  • Du Crosse (first name unknown) (died 1687), martyr, Marseilles.[363]
  • Robert d'Ully, viscount de Novion (1606-1686), martyr, Picardy, executed and body thrown into a dog's kennel by Roman Catholic monks.[376]
  • 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.[396][397][398]
  • Pierre Durand (1700–1732) martyr, pastor.[399]
  • Francourt (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Blanche Gamond (1664-circa 1700), from Saint-Paul-Trois-Chateux in Dauphiné, prisoner of conscience in Grenoble and Valences 1686-87, torture victim and memoirist. Key work: Blanche Gamond, a Heroine of the Faith (English-language title of her memoir).[400][401]
  • Gastine (last name unknown) (died 1572), widow and mother of two young children, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Giscart (died 1562), first name unknown, pastor, martyred at Castelnaudary.[371][402]
  • Jean Goujon (1510–1572), sculptor, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Hamelin (first name unknown) (died 1546), executed for possessing a Bible.[365]
  • Philibert Hamelin (died 1557), executed for being a clandestine pastor.[171]
  • Isaac Homel (1612-1683), pastor of Soyon, martyr publicly executed on the wheel on the order of the Jesuits.[403]
  • John Huber, galley slave.[362]
  • Keny (first name unknown) (died 1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Robert a Knacker (died 1686), pauper of Metz, martyr, executed, body stripped naked and dumped on a dunghill.[376]
  • Baudon la Cassaigne, civic leader in Nimes, jailed.[404]
  • Jacques Langlois (died 1572), pastor, martyr, killed in Lyons (in the wake of the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).
  • La Renaudie (died 1560), pseudonym for aristocrat, conspirator, martyr (Amboise Conspiracy).[405]
  • Laugoiran (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Louis Le Coq (died 1572), pastor, martyr, killed in Rouen (in the wake of the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[371]
  • Magdalen Lefebvre, Norman farmer's daughter, child refugee smuggled out of France alone, from near Avranches, one of Magdalen's descendants was a friend of Eizabeth Gaskell, who documented her story.[406]
  • Isaac Le Fevre, Advocate of Parliament, martyr, died on a slave galley.[407]
  • Le More (first name unknown) (died 1572), pastor, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[371]
  • Barthélemi Milon, paraplegic, martyred for possessing anti-mass placard.[395]
  • Monneins (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Claude Monier (died 1551), pastor, martyr.[176]
  • Matthew Morel, teenage boy sentenced to galley slavery.[362]
  • Antoine Morlier, galley slave.[362]
  • Pierre Loiseleur dit de Villiers (died 1572), pastor, martyr, killed in Rouen (in the wake of the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[371]
  • Marcil (first name unknown), pastor, wounded or killed Poitiers, 1562.[371]
  • 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.[408]
  • Gabriel Maturin, left crippled by twenty-six years' confinement in the Bastille,[224] ancestor of clergyman and author, Charles Maturin.[409]
  • Samuel Mettayer, pastor, victim of persecution.[410]
  • Leonard Morel, pastor, wounded and taken prisoner in the Vassy Massacre, 1561.[371]
  • Nadal (first name unknown), of the village of de la Salle, condemned to galley slavery.[361]
  • Spire Niquet (died 1572), bookseller, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Pardaillan (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Paulin (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Oudin Petit (died 1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[364]
  • Piles (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Jacques Pineton de Chambrun (1635-1689), pastor held captive and ill-treated by the dragonnades who briefly abjured, memoirs. Key work: Les Larmes.[411][412][413]
  • Pluviant (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[367]
  • Quercy (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Petrus Ramus (1515–1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre), philosopher.[414]
  • Catherine Ravental (died 1687), martyr, a Huguenot woman who was in labour when she was murdered by dragonnade soldiers, who then mutilated her other two children.[403]
  • Regniers (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Fulcran Rey (died 1686), theology student, pastor, martyr, of Nimes, executed.[415][416]
  • Jean Ribault (1520–1565), early colonizer of America, he and other Huguenot colonists were massacred by the Spanish for their faith.[417][418]
  • Richer (first name unknown), pastor, wounded or killed Poitiers, 1562.[371]
  • Saint-Romain (first name unknown) (died 1572), nobleman, martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[370]
  • Pierre-Paul Sirven (1709–1777), victim of persecution.[419]
  • Soubise (first name unknown) (died 1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[388]
  • Martin Tachard (died 1567), pastor, martyr, led in mockery through streets of Foix and executed there.[371][420]
  • Taverny (first name unknown) (died 1572), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[388]
  • Teiffier (first name unknown) (died 1687), martyr, of Durfort near Nimes, executed for attending a Protestant church service.[361]
  • François Vivent (died 1692), Camisard lay preacher, martyr, killed by Government soldiers in a gun battle.[421][422]

Military

Missionaries

  • Mac All (1821-1893), founder, Mission for Paris Workers.[254]
  • Thomas Arbousset, missionary in Orange Free State, member of the Paris Evangelical Missionary Society.[468][469]
  • Alfred Casalis (1862 -1950), missionary pastor.[469]
  • Annette Casalis (1908-1988). missionary doctor, sister of Georges Casalis.[470][471]
  • Eugène Casalis, missionary and director of the Paris Evangelical Missions Society.[472]
  • Georges Casalis, missionary doctor.[469]
  • Jean-Eugène Casalis (1812-1891), missionary.[469]
  • François Daumas, missionary in Orange Free State, member of the Paris Evangelical Missionary Society.[468]
  • Constant Gosselin, lay missionary.[469]
  • Clement Le Cossec (1921-2001), founder of the Evangelical Gypsy Mission.[473]
  • Maurice Leenhardt (1878-1954), missionary, pastor and ethnologist specialising in the Kanak people of New Caledonia.[474][473]
  • Henri Pyt (1796-1835), missionary who helped rebuild church in France after century of persecution.[254]
  • Eugène Réveillaud (1851-1935), founder, Parisian Committee of Domestic Mission.[254]
  • Napoléon Roussel (1805-1878), church planter in Charente.[254]
  • Pierre Stouppe (1690–1760), Huguenot pastor then low church/evangelical Anglican minister, missionary to African-American slaves.[475][476][477]

Musicians

  • Loys Bourgeois (1510–1559), Psalm music composer (the "Old 100th").[478]
  • Edmond Louis Budry (1854–1932), hymnwriter ("Thine Be the Glory").[479][480]
  • Rosemary Clooney (1928-2002), American jazz and Hollywood musicals singer and actress, descended from the Koch family of Alsace-Lorraine.[21]
  • Alice Cooper (real name Vincent Damon Furnier) (1948-), American heavy metal singer and born-again Christian.[481][482][483]
  • Pierre Davantès (1525–1561), composer and scholar.[484][485]
  • Paschal de l'Estocart (1538-1587), Psalm music composer.[486]
  • Jacques Ducros, tenor with Ensemble Huguenot.[487][488][489]
  • Ampie du Preez (1982-), South African singer-songwriter.[52]
  • Brian Eno (1948–), English music producer, ambient musician, atheist, descended from the Hennot family of Mons, Flanders.[490][491]
  • Odile Faniard, mezzo-soprano with Ensemble Huguenot.[487][488][489]
  • George Fourie, South African opera singer.[492]
  • Johnny Fourie, South African jazz guitarist.[52]
  • Guillaume Franc (1505–1571), Psalm music composer.[493]
  • Eric Galia, pastor, jazz musician (Esprit-Swing Trio).[494]
  • Judy Garland (1922-1969), American jazz and Hollywood musicals singer and actress,[495][496][497] French Huguenot ancestry on her father's side.[498][499][431]
  • Severine Genevaz, soprano with Ensemble Huguenot.[487][488][489]
  • Claude Goudimel (1520–1572), composer of musical settings for the Psalms (Genevan Psalter), martyr (Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre).[500]
  • Nikolaus Harnoncourt (1939–2016), Austrian conductor.[501][502]
  • Christian Ignatius Latrobe (1758–1836), British clergyman, composer and musician, whose ancestors came from Languedoc.[503]
  • André Isoir (1935–2016), classical organist.[504][505]
  • Nicholas Lanier (1588–1666), Master of the King's Musick.[56]
  • Simon Le Bon (1958-), English musician and frontman of pop-rock band Duran Duran.[506]
  • Claudin Le Jeune (1530-1600), composer and music publisher of the Genevan Psalter, from Valenciennes.[507]
  • 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 the Le Sage family later emigrated to Australia.)[508][509]
  • Jean-Bernard Logier (1777-1846), composer who developed a system of musical notation.[224]
  • Lorna Luft (1952–), American jazz and Hollywood musicals singer and actress, daughter of Judy Garland.[495][496]
  • 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.[510]
  • Samuel Mareschal (1554-), organist and music publisher of the Genevan Psalter.[507]
  • Clément Marot (1496–1544), poet who versified the Psalms into French (Genevan Psalter).[511]
  • Liza Minnelli (1946–), American jazz and Hollywood musicals singer and actress, daughter of Judy Garland.[495][496]
  • Bertrand Monbaylet, bass-baritone with Ensemble Huguenot.[487][488][489]
  • Jacques-Louis Monod (1927-2020), pianist, composer and teacher.[512][61]
  • Bénédict Pictet, composer of hymns and Christmas carols.[513]
  • Peter Prelleur (1705–1741), composer, organist and music teacher.[514]
  • Jean-Jacques Quesnot de La Chênée, librettist, theatre manager, staged Lully operas for Huguenot refugee community.[515]
  • André Raison, French Baroque composer and organist.
  • Nick Raison, jazz pianist, father of Miranda Raison.[516]
  • David Reinhardt, jazz guitarist, grandson of Django Reinhardt.[517]
  • Renaud (1952-), pop-rock singer, anti-military activist, agnostic from a Protestant family.[518]
  • Keith Richards (1943-), English blues and rock guitarist, descended from the Dupree family of silkweavers.[519][520]
  • André Rieu (1949–) Dutch violinist, descendant of the Rieu family of the Auvergne.[521][522][523]
  • Pierre Santerre, composer, music publisher of the Genevan Psalter.[507]
  • Jean Servin (1530-), composer of music for Psalms, music publisher of the Genevan Psalter and musician.[524][507]
  • Elizma Theron (1983-), South African singer.[52]
  • Mary Travers (1936–2009), American pop singer, member of the group Peter, Paul and Mary.[7]
  • Stevie Ray Vaughan (1954–1990), American blues guitarist, descendant of Leroux, Joquen and DuFour families.[112]
  • 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.[525][526]

Pastors and theologians

  • Firmin Abauzit (1679-1767), theologian, philosopher, editor, librarian.[527]
  • Jacques Abbadie (1654–1727), French theologian. Key work: Vindication of the Truth.[528]
  • Frank Jean Alexandre (1844-1922), pastor and theologian and the official historian of French Protestantism at the end of the 19th Century.[529]
  • Pierre Allègre, pastor.[530]
  • Pierre Allix (1641–1717), pastor. Key work: Some Remarks Upon the Ecclesiastical History of the Ancient Churches of Piedmont.[531]
  • Moses Amyraut (1596–1664), French theologian, proponent of Amyraldism.[532][533]
  • Friedrich von Ancillon (1767–1837), German pastor.[534]
  • Gabriel Astier, Camisard prophet.[535]
  • Edouard Aubertin, pastor, Paris.[536]
  • Charles-Édouard Babut (1835-1916), pastor, Nîmes. Even Catholics respected him so much they nicknamed him the "Saint of Nîmes".[252]
  • Jeab Barbeyrac (1674–1744), German pastor.[537]
  • Isaac Barbauld, pastor.[538]
  • Thomas Barclay (1849–1935), Scottish missionary.[539]
  • Madeleine Barot (1909–1995), theologian and pacifist, co-founder of the Cimade.[540]
  • Daniel Bas, Camisard lay preacher.[541]
  • 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.[542]
  • André Bastide, pastor.[530]
  • Marc-Antoine Benoist, pastor.[543]
  • Michel Berauld, pastor.[543]
  • Jacques Bernard (1658-1718), theologian.[544]
  • Charles Bertheau (1660–1732), pastor.[545]
  • Theodore Beza, French theologian. Key work: Treasure of Gospel Truth.[546]
  • Michel Block, pastor, member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants, and Christian pacifist.[547][548]
  • David Blondel (1691–1655), French clergyman, historian, classical scholar.[549][550]
  • Samuel Bochart (1599–1667), theologian and pacifist. Key work: Geographia Sacra seu Phaleg et Canaan.[551]
  • Henri Boegner, pastor, brother of Marc Boegner, member of Association Sully, a now-defunct Protestant royalist movement.[552]
  • Marc Boegner (1881–1970), theologian, pastor, ecumenist. Key work: Long Road to Unity: Memories and Anticipations.[553]
  • Laurent du Bois, Boston pastor.[554]
  • Daniel Bondet (1652-1723), pastor in the United States of America.[555]
  • Ami Bost (1790-1874), pastor, father of John Bost.[556][557]
  • Gilles Boucomont, pastor, founder and head of Les Attestants (a conservative, Biblically-faithful group), gay conversion therapy practitioner,[558] opponent of blessing same-sex marriages.[559][560][561]
  • Louis Bourgeois, theologian from Leiden.[538]
  • Pierre Brisbar, pastor.[410]
  • Brother Roger (1915–2005), founder of Taizé, Christian pacifist and ecumenist. Key work: Sources of Taizé: No Greater Love.[562]
  • Heinrich Bullinger (1504–1575), theologian. Key work: The Decades.[563]
  • Jean Bulteel, pastor.[564]
  • Jean Cadier (1898-1981), theologian, signatory to the Pomeyrol Theses.[565][566][567]
  • John Calvin (1509–1564), French theologian, pastor, and reformer. Key work: Institutes of the Christian Religion.[568][569]
  • Louis Cappel, French clergyman, Hebrew scholar.
  • George Casalis (1917-1987), pastor, prison chaplain at Spandau, theologian, great-grandson of Eugène Casalis and great-nephew of Alfred Casalis.[570][571]
  • Jean Casamajor, pastor.[538]
  • Sebastian Castellio (1515–1563), theologian, early proponent of freedom of conscience. Key work: Advice to a Desolate France.[572]
  • Guillaume Centurier (1776–1829), German pastor.[573]
  • Isaac Centurier, (1745–1816), German pastor.[574]
  • Alfred-Henri Chaber (1880-1955), pastor, co-founded the reformed temple of Brueys, member of Association Sully, a now-defunct Protestant royalist movement.[575]
  • Daniel Chamier, theologian, ancestor of actor Daniel Craig, co-drafter of the Edict of Nantes.[576][26]
  • Michel Charles, pastor.[543]
  • Daniel Charnier, pastor.[543]
  • Guillaume Chartier, theologian.[577]
  • Richard Chenevix, Irish Anglican bishop, descended from the Chenevix family of Metz, Lorraine.[288]
  • Frank Christol, French pastor in London in World War Two.[578]
  • Isaac Claude (1653-1695), theologian.[579]
  • Jean Claude (1619–1687), theologian.[580][581]
  • Jean Jacques Claude, pastor, Threadneedle Street, grandson of Jean Claude.[538]
  • François Clavairoly (1957-), pastor, former prison chaplain, former chair the regional council of the Nord-Normandie region, President of the Protestant Federation of France since 2013, member of the steering committee of the Amitié Judéo-Chrétienne de France Association, chairman of the Commission for Relations with Judaism of the Protestant Federation of France and ecumenist.[582][583]
  • Julien Coffinet, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[547]
  • Timothée Colani (1824-1888), liberal theologian.[584]
  • Jean Constans, pastor.[543]
  • Athanase Laurent Charles Coquerel (1795-1868), liberal theologian, elected deputy of the Constituent Assembly after the revolution of February 1848.[585]
  • Athanase Josué Coquerel (1820–1875), liberal theologian, co-founder of the Historical Society of French Protestantism. Key work: La Saint-Barthélémy.[586][587]
  • Charles Eugene Correvon (1856–1928), German pastor.[588]
  • Jacques Couet (1546-1608), pastor.[589]
  • Antoine Court (1695–1760), pastor. Key work: An Historical Memorial of the Most Remarkable Proceedings Against the Protestants in France from 1744-51.[590]
  • 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.[591]
  • Jean Crespin (1520–1572), martyrologist. Key work: Lives of the Martyrs.[592]
  • Oscar Cullmann (1902–1999), theologian and ecumenist.[593]
  • Jean Daillé (1594-1670), French theologian. Key work: Apology for the French Reformed Churches.[594]
  • Lambert Daneau (1530–1590), theologian. Key work: Wonderful Workmanship of the World.[595]
  • Charles Daubuz (1673-1713), pastor, theologian, eschatologist. Key work: A Perpetual Commentary on the Revelation of St. John.[596]
  • Jean-Marc Daumas (1953-2013), pastor, writer, historian, member of the Union of Monarchist Protestants, the modern successor of Association Sully.[597]
  • Daniel De Barthe, pastor and theoloigian.[598]
  • Bérard de Beaujardin (1618-1693), pastor, theologian.[599]
  • Isaac de Beausobre (1659-1738), pastor.[600]
  • David de Bonrepos, pastor in the United States of America.[555]
  • Jacques de Brissac, pastor, theologian.[601]
  • Hugues de Cabrol (1909-2001), pastor, member of Association Sully, a now-defunct Protestant royalist movement.[602]
  • Charles de Claremont, pastor, religious revivalist at La Rochelle.[603]
  • Guillaume de Clermont, pastor, regional synod president.[604][605]
  • Odet de Coligny (1517–1571), former Roman Catholic cardinal, convert to Protestantism.[385][606]
  • Suzanne de Dietrich (1891–1981), theologian, Cimade worker, co-writer of the Pomeyrol Theses and pacifist (French Lutheran).[607]
  • Guillaume de Félice, Comte de Panzutti, French abolitionist, theologian.
  • Leon Degrémont, pastor.[608]
  • Jessé de Forest, leader of a group of Walloon-Huguenots who fled Europe due to religious persecutions.
  • Isaac de Juigné, pastor.[410]
  • Jean de Labadie (1610-1674), Jesuit convert to Calvinism, founder of the pietistic Labadists.[609]
  • Antoine de la Roche Chandieu, Parisian pastor, co-author with Calvin of the Galllican Confession of Faith.[610]
  • Josué de la Place (c. 1596 – 1665 or possibly 1655), pastor, theologian.[611]
  • Samuel Delon Perille, pastor.[612]
  • Jean Delpech, pastor.[538]
  • Pierre Delpuech, pastor.[575]
  • Philippe de Mornay (1549–1623), theologian. Key work (likely author): Vindiciae contra tyrannos.[613]
  • Antoine-Noé de Polier de Bottens (1713-1783), theologian.[614]
  • 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.[615]
  • 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.[616][617]
  • Jacob de Rouffignac, refugee pastor in Essex.[618]
  • Stéphane Desmarais, Pastor of the French Church in London.[619]
  • Jochen Desel, pastor, former president of the German Huguenot Society.[620]
  • Nicolas des Gallars (1520–1580), theologian, pastor at Threadneedle Street.[385]
  • Bernard de Sonis, pastor.[543]
  • Christophe Desplanque, pastor and member of Les Attestants, a group opposing theological liberalism and seeking to return the French Church to the traditional Huguenot belief in the "sovereign authority of the Biblical Word for the life of Christians..."[547][621]
  • Daniel de Superville (1657-1728), pastor.[622]
  • Vinchon des Voeux, pastor of French Church in Dublin, from Rouen.[224]
  • Jacques de Veines, pastor.[410]
  • Alphonse de Vignolles (1649–1744), German pastor.[623]
  • Pierre Loyseleur de Villiers, pastor, Threadneedle Street.[385]
  • Isaac d'Hussieau (1607-1672), pastor, theologian.[624]
  • Charles Drelincourt (1595–1669), pastor. Key work: The Christian's Defence Against the Fears of Death.[625]
  • Laurent Drelincourt (1626–1681), theologian, pastor, poet, son of Charles Drelincourt.[626]
  • Clemens du Bois, pastor, Hanau.[627]
  • Jacob Duché (1737–1798), pastor in Philadelphia, USA.[628]
  • 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.[629]
  • Jehan Duperche, pastor.[410]
  • Francois Loumeau Dupont, the pastor of the French Church in Edinburgh.[630]
  • Philip Dupont, pastor.[631]
  • Francis Durand, convert from Roman Catholicism, became pastor of the French Church at Canterbury.[224]
  • Theodore Dury (Du Ry) (born 1661), pastor.[632]
  • Isaac du Soul (1596-1676), pastor, theologian.[633]
  • Jacques Ellul (1912–1994), theologian and pacifist. Key work: Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes.[634][635]
  • Pierre Encontre, pastor.[530]
  • Jean Pierre Erman (1735–1814), German pastor and schoolmaster.[636]
  • David Eustache, pastor.[637]
  • Tommy Fallot (1844–1904), pastor, founder of Social Christianity. Key work: Christianisme social, études et fragments (French Lutheran).[638][473]
  • William Farel (1489–1565), theologian who recruited Calvin to Geneva.[639]
  • Jean Faucher, pastor and theologian.[598]
  • Abraham Faure (1795-1875), South African pastor and author.[52]
  • Jean Jacques Favre, pastor.[538]
  • Louis Fayet, pastor.[530]
  • Patrice Fondja, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[547]
  • Jacques Fontaine, pastor in Cork, weaver, fisherman.[640]
  • Jean Samuel Formey (1711–1797), theologian and historian.[641]
  • Sébastien Fresse, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[547]
  • Gaston Frommel (1862-1906), French theologian.[642][643][644]
  • Jacques Gaillard, pastor and theologian.[637]
  • John Gano, Baptist preacher and Revolutionary War chaplain.
  • John Gast (1715-1788), Irish minister.[645][646]
  • François Gaussen (1790–1863), pastor and eschatologist,[647] Calvinist who was influential on the early Seventh Day Adventists.[648] Key works: Theopneusty; Or, the Plenary Inspiration of the Holy Scriptures and The Prophet Daniel Explained. In a Series of Readings for Young Persons.[649]
  • Pascal Geoffroy, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[547]
  • Simon Gibert, pastor.[530]
  • Etienne Gibert, underground pastor in the "Church of the Desert" period and thereby one of the last refugees to arrive in Britain.[121]
  • Jean Gigord, theologian.[576]
  • Simon Goulart (1543–1628), pastor, theologian and poet.[650]
  • André Gounelle (1933–), liberal and process theologian.[651]
  • Élie Gounelle (1865–1950), pastor, liberal theologian, Social Christianity advocate.[638][652][653]
  • Rémi Gounelle (1967-), theologian, nephew of André Gounelle.[654]
  • Heinrich Grüber (1891–1975), theologian, opponent of Nazism and pacifist.[655]
  • Jean Guisot, pastor.[530]
  • Matthias Helmlinger, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[547]
  • Thomas Hervé, pastor, convert from Roman Catholicism.[656]
  • Jean-Michel Hornus, theologian and pacifist. Key work: It is Not Lawful for Me to Fight: Early Christian Attitudes Toward War, Violence, and the State.[657]
  • François Hotman (1524–1590), theologian. Key work: Francogallia.[658][659]
  • Hurtienne, German pastor.[660]
  • Jean Jarousseau (1729–1819), pastor.[661]
  • Edmond Jeanneret (1914–1990), pastor.[662]
  • Charles Estienne Jordan (1700–1745), German pastor, advisor to Frederick the Great.[663]
  • Jean-Pierre Julian, pastor, regional synod president.[664]
  • Pierre Jurieu, French pastor, orthodox Calvinist theologian[665] and eschatologist. Key work: Pastoral Letters.[666]
  • Jacques Kaltenbach, pastor, Social Christianity advocate, mentor to André Trocmé.[667]
  • Jean-Pierre Lafont, pastor.[530]
  • 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.[668]
  • François de La Pilonierre, Jesuit who converted to Protestantism and was obliged to flee the country as a result. Key work: Defense des Principes de la Tolerance.[669]
  • Arnaud Lepine Lassagne, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[547]
  • Jean Lasserre (1908–1983), conservative, Biblically-orthodox theologian, pastor and pacifist. Key work: War and the Gospel[670][671]
  • 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..[672][673]
  • Pierre-Olivier Léchot (1978–), theologian.[674]
  • Henry Leenhardt (1900-1961), theologian.[675][676]
  • Robert Le Maçon seigneur de la Fontaine, pastor, Threadneedle Street.[385]
  • Andrew Le Mercier (1692–1764), pastor and writer.
  • François le Sueur, early South African pastor.[677]
  • Josue Le Vasseur, pastor.[678]
  • Frédéric Lichtenberger (1832-1899), evangelical pastor and theologian (French Lutheran).[679]
  • Robert Lorent (1698–1782), pastor in Berlin.[680]
  • Paul Lorrain (died 1719), secretary to Samuel Pepys, Anglican clergyman, 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.[336]
  • Jean Jacques Majendie (1709–1783), pastor of the Savoy Church in London.[248]
  • Antoine Marcourt, pastor (the Posters Incident).[681]
  • Élie Marion, Camisard prophet.[682][683]
  • Paul-Henri Marron (1754–1832), first pastor to work in Paris after Protestantism was legalised because of the French Revolution.[684][685]
  • Jacques Martin (1906–2001), pastor, pacifist, saviour of Jews in World War Two.[686][687]
  • Joseph Martin-Paschoud (1802-1873), liberal pastor, pacifist, supporter of Frédéric Passy's peace society, supporter of French Judaism.[688]
  • Ètienne Mathiot, pastor, tried for sheltering Algerian boy during war.[689][690]
  • Jacques Matthieu, pastor.[530]
  • Basil Maturin, Anglican minister and writer who later converted to Roman Catholicism, Lusitania torpedoeing victim, grandson of Charles Maturin.[409]
  • Gabriel Maturin (1700–1746), Irish clergyman and philanthropist[691]
  • Jacques Maury (died 1987), pastor, president of the French Protestant Federation.[692]
  • Pierre Maury (1890–1956), pastor.[693]
  • Joseph Meffre (1766–1845), pastor, convert from Roman Catholicism.[656]
  • Pierre Merlin (died 1603), chaplain to Coligny, later pastor at La Rochelle and synod head.[694][695]
  • Eugène Ménégoz (1838-1921), symbolofideist theologian (French Lutheran).[696]
  • Jean Mesnard (died 1727), pastor, French Protestant Chapel, Copenhagen, later a director of the London French Hospital.[121]
  • Jean Mestrezat (1592-1657), French theologian and pastor.[697][698]
  • Jean Mestrezat, pastor, Paris. One of the first pastors to work in the city after Protestantism was legalised.[699]
  • Jean Mettayer, pastor, Soho.[410][121]
  • Caesar de Missy (1703–1775), pastor, Savoy, London, chaplain to King George III.[121]
  • Adolphe Monod (1802–1856), pastor.[700][701]
  • Frédéric Monod (1794–1863), pastor.[702]
  • 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.[703]
  • Wolfgang Musculus (1497–1563), theologian.[704]
  • Beyers Naudé, South African anti-apartheid cleric.[52]
  • Jozua Francois Naudé (1873-1948), South African pastor, school founder and co-founder of the Afrikaner Broederbond.[52]
  • Guy-Bertrand Ngougou-Fotso, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[547]
  • Henri Nick (1868–1954), pastor, Social Christianity advocate, pacifist, saviour of Jews.[653]
  • Moses Nicolas, Camisard prophet.[705]
  • Johannes Ökolampad (1482–1531), reformer.[706]
  • Olivétan (1506–1538), Bible translator.[707]
  • Dacres Olivier (1826-1919), English Anglican minister, private chaplain to the Earl of Pembroke, later a canon of Salisbury Cathedral, conservative figure, father of Edith Olivier and related to Sir Laurence Olivier.[708]
  • Joudain Olivier, pastor.[709]
  • René Pache (1904-1979), theologian, pastor, writer, vice-president of the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students, director of the Emmaus Bible and Missionary Institute in Lausanne, Switzerland. Key work: The Future Life.[710]
  • Claude Pajon (1626–1685), pastor.[711]
  • John Rawstorne Papillon, Anglican clergyman, descendant of Huguenot refugee David Papillon.[712]
  • Eric Pasteur, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[713]
  • Félix Pécaut (1828–1898), pastor and educator.[714]
  • Simon Pelloutier (1694–1757), French pastor in Berlin.[715]
  • Louis Pernot (1959–), liberal pastor, classical lutist.[716][717]
  • Marc Pernot (1958–), liberal pastor, former scientist and AI geographer, advocate of blessing same-sex marriages,[718][719] advocate of Gounelle's process theology and Caputo's "weak God" theology,[720][721][722] rejector of the existence of Satan,[723][724] former pastor of the Oratoire du Louvre in Paris and currently-serving pastor of Geneva.[725][726]
  • Eric Perrier, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[547]
  • Jacques Pineton de Chambrun (1637-1689), theologian.[727]
  • Abel Poupin (died 1556), pastor.[728]
  • Jean Pradel, pastor.[530]
  • Guiges Prévost, pastor, Geneva.[729]
  • David Primerose, pastor, Threadneedle Street.[730]
  • Samuel Provoost (1742–1815), American clergyman.
  • François Puaux (1806-1895), evangelical pastor, vigorous debater and fiery opponent of liberals and Roman Catholics.[731]
  • Paul Rabaut (1718–1794), pastor.[732][733]
  • Jacques Antoine Rabaut-Pommier (1744–1820), pastor, vaccination advocate, supporter of Napoleon Bonaparte.[734]
  • Olivier Raoul-Duval, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants.[547]
  • François Rapiné, pastor, tried for sheltering Algerian boy during war.[735][690]
  • Jean François Reclam (1778–1831), French pastor in Berlin.[736]
  • Jacques Reclus (1796–1882), pastor.[249]
  • Charles Renouvier, theologian.[737]
  • Albert Réville (1826-1906), pastor, extreme liberal theologian, Dreyfus supporter.[738][739]
  • Zacharie Richard, pastor.[410]
  • Jean Richaud, pastor.[543]
  • Claude Richier, pastor.[538]
  • David Richier, pastor.[410]
  • André Rivet (1572–1651), theologian.[740]
  • Albert Rivett (1855–1934), Australian Congregationalist minister and pacifist, father of the scientist, David Rivett.[741][742]
  • William Romaine (1714-1795), evangelical Anglican minister. Key work: The Life, Walk and Triumph of Faith.[743]
  • Roman the Paquetou, Camisard lay preacher.[744]
  • Camille Rombaut, pastor, pacifist.[687]
  • Pierre Roques (1685–1748), pastor.[745]
  • Hermann Roquette (1815–1890), French-Reformed minister in Königsberg.[746]
  • Henri Roser (1899–1981), pastor and pacifist.[747][687]
  • 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).[748]
  • Daniel Sanxay, clergyman.[656]
  • Claude Saumeis (died 1652), pastor.[749]
  • 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.[750][751]
  • François Saussine, pastor.[530]
  • Pierre Saussine, pastor.[530]
  • Edmond Scherer (1815-1889), liberal theologian, agnostic.[752]
  • Laurent Schlumberger (1957–), first President of the United Protestant Church of France from 2013 to 2017.[753]
  • Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965), liberal/unorthodox theologian and pastor,[754] missionary, hospital founder, organist, musicologist, writer, humanitarian, philosopher, physician, had pacifist leanings,[755] Nobel Peace Prize winner 1953, Lutheran from Alsace.[756][757]
  • Claude Scoffier, pastor.[538]
  • Paul Secrétan, theologian.[737]
  • Peter Serrurier pastor, Amsterdam.[758]
  • Pierre Sestier, pastor.[543]
  • Pierre Simon, first Huguenot pastor in South Africa.[759]
  • Édouard Soulier (1870-1938), pastor and politician, worked for "Christianity Against Communism".[760]
  • Charles Spurgeon (1834–1892), first pastor of the Metropolitan Tabernacle, founder of a theological college, almshouses and orphanage, writer.[761]
  • Jacques Stewart, former head of the Protestant Federation of France.[762]
  • Ch.H.P. Suchier (1730–1794), French-Reformed minister in Karlshafen.[763]
  • Jean Tenans, pastor.[543]
  • Édouard Theis, pastor, aide to André Trocmé, saviour of Jews.[764]
  • André Thobois (1924-2012), pastor, vice-president of the Protestant Federation of France, president of the Association of Professing Churches, president of the Biblical Alliance French, President of the Council of the Free Faculty of Evangelical Theology of Vaux-sur-Seine, author (French Baptist).[473]
  • Henri Tollin (1833–1902), pastor in Magdeburg, founder of the German Huguenot Society.[765]
  • Pierre-Charles Toureille (1900–1976), pastor, Cimade worker, chaplain to French concentration camp prisoners and saviour of Jews in World War Two.[766][767]
  • Daniel Toussain (1541-1602), pastor, Basel.[768]
  • André Trocmé (1901–1971), French theologically-conservative pastor, Christian pacifist, saviour of Jews in World War Two and anti-nuclear campaigner. Key work: Jesus and the Nonviolent Revolution.[769][770][771]
  • Antoine Vermeil, pastor.[473]
  • Philippe Vernier, pastor, pacifist.[772][687]
  • Isabeau Vincent, prophetess.[773]
  • Paul Vincent, pastor.[530]
  • Alexandre Vinet (1797-1847), theologian, considered the most important thinker of nineteenth century French-speaking Protestantism. Key work: Homiletics; or the Theory of Preaching.[774]
  • Pierre Viret (1511–1572), theologian. Key work: Thou Shalt Not Kill.[775]
  • Charles Wagner (1852–1918), pastor, liberal theologian, Social Christianity advocate.[638]
  • Noé Walter, pastor and member of the conservative, Biblically-faithful group, Les Attestants, pacifist.[547][776]
  • Charles Westphal, pastor.[777]
  • James Woody, pastor, head of French protestantism's liberal group,[778] advocate of blessing same-sex marriages,[779] and anti-pacifist.[780][781]
  • John Yver, refugee pastor in several churches in London, then Holland.[121]

Philanthropists and charity workers

  • Jaques-Pierre André, a director of the French Hospital in London.[782]
  • Henriette André-Walther (1807-1886), supporter of the Paris Evangelical Mission Society and the Association of Deaconesses of Reuilly, turned her estate, Les Ombrages, into a meeting place for Protestants of an evangelical persuasion, and then into an infirmary, and then into an orphanage for boys and then into a reception centre for a wide variety of refugees during the 1871 Paris Commune. She was also very concerned about the plight of the working class and advocated for social reform on their behalf. She lived simply and humbly, despite her wealth.[783]
  • Jaques Baudouin, director of the French Hospital.[784]
  • 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.[785][617]
  • Eugenie Bost, philanthropist, memoirist, wife of John Bost.[786]
  • 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.[556][787]
  • Arthur Giraud Browning (1835-1907), governor of the Westminster School, director of the French Hospital and co-founder of the London Huguenot Society.[788]
  • Anna Bullinger (1504–1564), former nun, wife of Heinrich Bullinger, known for caring for refugees and the homeless, including English Protestants fleeing from persecution under Queen Mary. Commended by Queen Elizabeth I for this work.[789]
  • Antoinette Butte (1898-1986), French Girl Scouts co-founder.[790]
  • François Henri Ernest Chabaud-Latour (1804–1885), French Bible Society chairman.[791]
  • Évelyne Chazot (1883-1968), saviour of Jews in World War Two.[792][793][794]
  • René Courin, lay worker, co-author of the Pomeyrol Theses.[795]
  • Suzanne Curchod (1737-1794), hospital founder, writer and salonist, wife of Jacques Necker.[796][797]
  • Roger Darcissac, aide to André Trocmé, saviour of Jews in World War Two.[764]
  • Nicole Deheuvels, director, Le Service Éliézer (part of La Cause).[798]
  • Pierre de La Primaudaye, a governor of the London French Hospital.[387]
  • Malcolm Delevingne (1868–1950), Barnado's charity worker, occupational health and safety and anti-drug advocate, public servant.[799]
  • Henri de Sainte-Colome, director of La Soupe soup kitchen charity and of the French Hospital.[656]
  • Jacques Louis des Ormeaux, a director of the London French Hospital.[224]
  • Pierre de Tascher, a director of the London French Hospital.[121]
  • Louis De Tudert (died 1739), director of the French Hospital, left bequests to the Hospital and to La Soupe.[784]
  • Marguerite de Witt-Schlumberger (1853–1924), philanthropist and non-violent resistor to German rule in Alsace.[233]
  • Frederick Eccleston du Faur (1832–1915), British-born Australian patron of the arts.[10][800]
  • Suzette Duflo (1910-1983), president of the Mouvement Jeunes Femmes from 1949 to 1956 and of the Christian Union for Young Girls from 1956 to 1961.[801]
  • Henri Dunant (1828-1910), founder of the Red Cross, Nobel Peace Prize winner.[802]
  • Christophe Durrleman (1921-2001), director of La Cause from 1954, son of Freddy Durrleman.[803]
  • Freddy Durrleman (1881-1944), founder of La Cause, a Protestant organization dedicated to social work (organising adoptions, providing assistance to the blind and arranging marriages) and evangelization in France, pastor.[804]
  • Valdo Durrleman (1910-1944), La Cause worker, pastor, son of Freddy Durrleman.[805]
  • Edith du Tertre (1912-2005), co-founder, Action by Christians for the Abolition of Torture.[473]
  • Hélène Engel (1902-1984), co-founder, Action by Christians for the Abolition of Torture.[473]
  • Léon Eyraud (1883–1953), saviour of Jews, Christian pacifist, aide to André Trocmé.[806]
  • 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.[19][807][808]
  • François-Arnail, Marquis of Jaucourt (1757–1852), Protestant Bible Society chairman, freemason.[809]
  • Peter Paul Grellier (1773–1828), a director of the French Hospital.[106]
  • Richard Grellier (1801–1863), a director of the French Hospital.[106]
  • Jean Griffin, a director of the French Hospital and an ancestor of Lady Jane Franklin, descended from the Griffin silkweaving family of Normandy.[810][811]
  • Elisabeth Gruzon, member of Young Women association.[812]
  • Henry John Guinand (1756), fundraiser for numerous charities, sub-governor of the French Hospital in London.[813]
  • David Hubert, founder of the French Protestant Charity School.[656]
  • L. Stanley Johnson (died 1941), director of French Hospital in London.[814]
  • Adèle Kamm (1885-1911), terminally-ill girl, founded an association where hospital patients could share their thoughts with each other in a diary, "Les Ladybugs", and write their testimonies. This grew into an organisation, the Union des Coccinelles, which visits the sick in hospital. She also wrote the pamphlet, "Joyful in Affliction" (1910).[815]
  • Armand Laferrère, political advisor and member of the board of directors of the Franco-Israeli Friendship Association.[816]
  • Daniel Legrand (1783–1858), philanthropist and industrialist, grandfather of Tommy Fallot.[817]
  • Ashurst Majendie (1784–1867), a director of French Hospital and one of the Assistant Poor Law Commissioners.[248]
  • Caroline Malvesin (1806-1889), founder of a Protestant order for women.[473]
  • Philippe Ménard, founder of the London French Hospital.[656]
  • Geneviève Monod, member of Young Women association.[818]
  • Sarah Monod (1836-1912), philanthropist and feminist, daughter of Adolphe Monod.[819]
  • Violette Mouchon (1893-1985), French Girl Scouts co-founder.[790]
  • Felix Neff (1798–1829), pastor and philanthropist.[820]
  • J. F. Oberlin (1740–1826), pastor, philanthropist and social reformer (French Lutheran).[821]
  • Daniel Olivier (1722–1782), a director of the French Hospital in London.[709]
  • Henry William Peek (died 1898), director and deputy governor of the French Hospital and founding member of the Huguenot Society of London.[822]
  • Émile Peugeot, peace and charity worker, created relief organisations and built a hospital where Peugeot employees would receive free health care and other social benefits (French Lutheran).[229]
  • Lucy Peugeot (died 1928), peace and charity worker (French Lutheran).[229]
  • 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.[823][784]
  • Jacques Saussine (died 1942), theology student, Cimade worker (aided Jews in prison camps in World War Two), nephew of Pierre-Charles Toureille.[824]
  • Charles John Shoppee (1823-1897), co-founder of Huguenot Society of London and director of the French Hospital.[825]
  • Magda Trocmé (1901-1996), laywoman, wife of André Trocmé, saviour of Jews in World War Two, anti-nuclear activist.[826][827][828]
  • Leonard Turquand, a director of the French Hospital in London.[106]
  • 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.[829][830]
  • Henry Wagner (1840-1926), donor to Huguenot Library, director of the French Hospital.[784]
  • Marguerite Walther (1882-1942), French Girl Scouts co-founder.[790]
  • Frederick Winsor, director of the French Hospital.[784]

Philosophers

  • Raoul Allier (1862-1939), philosopher, Social Christianity advocate, Dreyfus supporter, Laicité law supporter, war inciter in World War One.[831]
  • Pierre Bayle (1647–1706), French philosopher.[832][833]
  • Jacques Maritain (1882-1973), philosopher from Protestant family, converted to Roman Catholicism, drafter of Universal Declaration of Human Rights.[834]
  • James Martineau (1805–1900), English philosopher, educator, Unitarian minister, descended from Gaston Martineau, a Huguenot surgeon and refugee.[835]
  • Paul Ricœur (1913–2005), philosopher and pacifist.[836]
  • 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,[837] rejecting original sin and some other key tenets of mainstream Calvinist faith.[838][839][840]
  • Théodore Eugène César Ruyssen (1868–1967), philosopher and pacifist.[841]

Pioneers and explorers

Politicians

Printers and booksellers

  • Conrad Badius, printer.[171]
  • Matthias Bonhomme, printer.[966]
  • Jean Bonnefoy, printer.[967]
  • Thomas Courteau, printer.[171]
  • Richard Crassott (1530-), music publisher of the Genevan Psalter.[507]
  • Antoine Davodeau, printer.[967]
  • Zacarie Durand, printer.[967]
  • Hugues Sureau du Rosier, music publisher of the Genevan Psalter and pastor.[507]
  • Henri Estienne (1528–1598), printer, son of Robert Estienne and father-in-law of Isaac Causabon.[968]
  • Robert Estienne (1503–1559), Genevan printer.[968][171]
  • Michel Ferrier, music publisher of the Genevan Psalter.[507]
  • Adam Riveriz, printer.[967]
  • Jean Riveriz, printer.[967]
  • Didier Rousseau, bookseller, ancestor of Jean-Jacques Rousseau.[171][969]

Privateers

Royalty

Scientists

Sportspeople

Weavers and textile manufacturers

  • Joseph André, inventor of denim.[1025][193][509]
  • Christopher Baudouin (1662–1724), silk designer.[1026]
  • Peter Bourdon, Spitalfields master weaver.[1027]
  • Charles Dalbiac (1726–1808), Spitalfields weaver, brother of James Dalbiac.[1028]
  • James Dalbiac (born 1720), Spitalfields weaver.[1029]
  • Marc de Comans, , tapestry weaver, associated with the Huguenot Gobelin dynasty.[1030]
  • François de la Planche, tapestry weaver, associated with the Huguenot Gobelin dynasty.[1030]
  • William Deloney, silk weaver.[1031]
  • Laurens des Bouverie, weaving factory owner.[1032]
  • Jean-Jacques Delessert (1690), silk magnate.[201]
  • Isaac Dupree, master weaver.[239]
  • Jean Dupree, journeyman weaver, ancestor of blues guitarist Keith Richards.[1033]
  • James Duthoit, weaver.[1032]
  • Frédéric Engel-Dollfus (1818–1883), textile manufacturer and philanthropist.[209]
  • Daniel Gobbee, master weaver.[1034]
  • Jean Guillemard, weaver, director of the French Hospital in London and ancestor of Lady Jane Franklin.[1032]
  • John Larguier, head of Weavers' Company, with royal warrant covering London and surrounds.[1035]
  • Edward Le Heup, weaver.[1036]
  • Peter Lekeux, master weaver.[56]
  • James Leman (1688–1745), silk designer.[1037]
  • Christophe-Philippe Oberkampf (1738–1815), printed fabric manufacturer.[1038]
  • Peter Abraham Ogier (1690-1757), Spitalfields master weaver, from Chassais L'Eglise in Bas Poitou.[1039]
  • Peter Ogier IV (1716-1754), master weaver, son of Peter Abraham Ogier.[1040]
  • Pierre Ogier (1711-1775), Spitalfields master weaver, from Chassais L'Eglise in Bas Poitou.[1041]
  • John Oliver, weaver.[709]
  • James Ouvry (died 1748), weaver.[1032]
  • John Ouvry (1707–1774), weaver.[1032]
  • Peter Ouvry, weaver.[1042]
  • Charles-Christophe Peugeot, textile manufacturer (French Lutheran).[229]
  • Jean-Jacques Peugeot, textile manufacturer (French Lutheran).[229]
  • Richard Phillis, weaver.[1043]
  • Daniel Pilon, Spitalfields master weaver.[1044]
  • Jean Rondeau, master weaver.[656]
  • Nicholas Schlumberger (1782–1867), cotton weaver.[233]
  • Samuel Totton, Spitalfields silk broker.[239]
  • Charles Triquet, weaver.[1045]
  • John Van Sommer (1705–1774), silk designer, master weaver.[1043][239]

Writers

Other

  • Sarah Austin (1793-1867), translator of German language books who did much to make Germany familiar to English readers.[1106]
  • Sophie Blanchard (1778-1819), female hot air balloon pioneer, aeronautics advisor to Napoleon Bonaparte, first woman to die in an aviation disaster.[1107]
  • Élie Bouhéreau (1643-1719), Dublin librarian, from La Rochelle.[1108][1109][1110]
  • Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806–1859), engineer.[1111][1112]
  • Idelette Calvin (1506–1549), wife of Jean Calvin.[1113][1114][1115]
  • Jean Pierre Chambon (died 1552), convicted criminal (robbery, murder), converted to Christ in prison.[368][369]
  • 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.[1116]
  • Marie de Cotteblanche (1520-1583), French noblewoman known for her skill in languages and translation of works from Spanish to French.[1066]
  • Marthe de Rocoulle (1659–1741), Huguenot governess of Frederick the Great.[1117]
  • Hans de Veille, librarian.[224]
  • Andrew Ducarel (1713-1785), librarian, antiquarian.[1118]
  • Claude du Chastel (1554–1587), heiress and famous lover.[1119]
  • Alfred Dupont, draper.[631]
  • Friedrich Clemens Ebrard (1850–1934), German librarian.[1120]
  • Danie G. Krige (1919-2013), South African mining engineer.[68]
  • Adolphe Landré (1828–1892), brewer of Berlin white beer, the production of which is attributed to the Huguenots.[1121]
  • Peter Le Heup (1699–1777), Director of Government Lotteries.[1036]
  • Denis Ragunier, stenographer who transcribed Calvin's sermons.[1122][967]
  • Anton Philipp Reclam (1807–1896), German librarian, publisher and founder of the Universalbibliothek.[1123][1124]
  • John Verneuil (died 1647), sub-librarian, Oxford.[121]

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  1034. Anishanslin, Zara (20 September 2016). Portrait of a Woman in Silk: Hidden Histories of the British Atlantic World. ISBN 9780300220551.
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  1048. "BECKETT, Samuel".
  1049. Gordon, Lois; Gordon, Lois G. (January 1996). The World of Samuel Beckett, 1906-1946. ISBN 0300074956.
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  1057. "Benjamin Constant de Rebecque (1767–1830)".
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  1059. "Mission".
  1060. "Agrippa d'Aubigné (1552–1630)".
  1061. "Walter de la Mare : Literary Contribution".
  1062. "'Of all fairy-tales, the most beautiful...' Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué's Undine".
  1063. Smiles, Samuel (1881). "The Huguenots: Their Settlements, Churches, and Industries in England and Ireland".
  1064. Mentzer, Raymond A.; Ruymbeke, Bertrand Van (2 February 2016). A Companion to the Huguenots. ISBN 9789004310377.
  1065. Couchman, Jane (23 March 2016). The Ashgate Research Companion to Women and Gender in Early Modern Europe. ISBN 9781317041054.
  1066. Robin, Diana (2016). "Intellectual women in early modern Europe". The Ashgate Research Companion to Women and Gender in Early Modern Europe. Routledge. pp. 399–424. ISBN 978-1-317-04105-4.
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  1078. Benson, Raymond. "The James Bond Bedside Companion".
  1079. "Huguenot Museum in Germany – Fontane, Theodor 1819–1898, Writer of Hugenot descent, chalk drawing by Hermann Karl Kersting".
  1080. "André Gide (1869–1951)".
  1081. "André Gide".
  1082. Atkin, Nicholas (22 July 2014). The French at War, 1934-1944. ISBN 9781317878933.
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  1085. Waller, Philip (2008). Writers, Readers, and Reputations: Literary Life in Britain 1870-1918. ISBN 978-0-19-954120-1.
  1086. Huguenot Church in Charleston, the. 2018. ISBN 9781625859211.
  1087. "SKBL.se - Françoise Marguerite Janiçon".
  1088. MacLean, Barbara Hutmacher (2004). Strike a Woman, Strike a Rock: Fighting for Freedom in South Africa. ISBN 9781592210763.
  1089. "Ode Krige".
  1090. Yeats, William (29 July 1993). Writings on Irish Folklore, Legend and Myth. ISBN 9780141960999.
  1091. "Le Fanu".
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  1094. "Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of London". 1894.
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  1096. "Edith Olivier".
  1097. "Huguenot Museum in Germany – Ostervald, Jean Frédéric, 1663–1747, translator of the Bible".
  1098. "Huguenot Museum in Germany – Salomé, Lou Andreas, 1861–1937, writer of Huguenot descent, reproduction".
  1099. Zaretsky, Robert (November 2010). N"mes at War: Religion, Politics, and Public Opinion in the Gard, 1938-1944. ISBN 978-0271043326.
  1100. "One Fairy Story Too Many: The Brothers Grimm and Their Tales. John M. Ellis". The Library Quarterly. 54 (4): 424–425. 1984. doi:10.1086/601538.
  1101. "Louise von François".
  1102. "Huguenot Museum in Germany – le Fort, Gertrud von, 1876–1971, writer of Huguenot descent, reproduction".
  1103. Jünger, Ernst; Peters, Jürgen (January 2002). German Writings Before and After 1945: E. Jünger ... [et al.]. ISBN 9780826414052.
  1104. "Richard Strauss and Romain Rolland Correspondence Diary and Essays".
  1105. Waugh, Evelyn (31 May 2012). A Little Learning: The First Volume of an Autobiography. ISBN 9780718197681.
  1106. "Elizabeth Gaskell, "Traits and Stories of the Huguenots" (1853)".
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  1109. "Bouhéreau, Élie (Elias) | Dictionary of Irish Biography".
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  1111. "An Irishman's Diary on Bray's cliff walk".
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  1113. "Who Was Idelette Calvin?". 18 January 2021.
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  1115. "Idelette: John Calvin's Search for the Right Wife".
  1116. Campbell, Sophie (6 June 2013). The Season: A Summer Whirl Through the English Social Season. ISBN 9781781311400.
  1117. "Huguenot Museum in Germany – Rocoulle, Marthe de, 1659–1741, Huguenot governess of Frederick the Great, after Antoine Pesne".
  1118. "Search Results".
  1119. "Claude du Chastel (1554–1587)".
  1120. "Huguenot Museum in Germany – Ebrard, Friedrich Clemens, 1850–1934, Library director of Huguenot descent in Frankfurt/Main, medal 1909".
  1121. "Huguenot Museum in Germany – Landré, Adolphe, 1828–1892, brewer of Berlin white beer, the production of which is attributed to the Huguenots".
  1122. McKim, Donald K. (17 June 2004). The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin. ISBN 9780521016728.
  1123. "Huguenot Museum in Germany – Reclam, Philipp, 1807–1896, publisher in Leipzig".
  1124. "Huguenot Museum in Germany – Reclam, Philipp, 1807–1896, founder of the Universalbibliothek".
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