List of people from Nantes
Appearance
This is a list of people born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with the city of Nantes, France.
A
[edit]- Anne of Brittany (1477–1514), Duchess of Brittany and Queen consort of France (only woman to have married two kings of France, Charles VIII and Louis XII)[1]
B
[edit]- Jean Marguerite Bachelier (1751-1843), revolutionary[2]
- Charles-Amable Battaille (1822–1872), French operatic bass[3]
- Henri-Franck Beaupérin (born 1968), classical organist[4]
- François Bégaudeau (born 1971), writer, journalist and actor
- René Berthelot (? – 1664), French actor and prominent member of Molière's theatre troupe
- Sophie Berthelot (1837–1907), wife of Marcellin Berthelot and the first woman to be interred at the Panthéon
- Louis-Albert Bourgault-Ducoudray (1840–1910), composer and professor (Prix de Rome laureate)
- Claire Bretécher (1940–2020), cartoonist
- Aristide Briand (1862–1932), French statesman (1926 Nobel Peace Prize laureate)
C
[edit]- Claude Cahun (born Lucy Schwob) (1894–1954), photographer and author
- Pierre Cambronne, general (commander of the Old Guard at Waterloo)
- Jacques Cassard (1679–1740), corsair
- Jeanne Cherhal, singer-songwriter
- Athanase-Charles-Marie Charette de la Contrie (1832–1911), French royal and general
- C2C, music producer
D
[edit]- Jacques Demy, movie director
- Jehan Desanges, (1929–2021), historian
F
[edit]- Manu Feildel, French chef/culinary contest judge, now lives in Australia, judge of My Kitchen Rules.
- Thierry Fortineau (1953–2006), actor
- Ernest Fouinet (1799–1845), 19th-century novelist and poet.
G
[edit]- Jean Graton (1923–2021), cartoonist, creator of Michel Vaillant
- Brigitte Grésy (born 1947), French minister
H
[edit]- Linda Hardy (born 1973), actress and model (Miss France 1992)
L
[edit]- Paul Ladmirault (1844–1944), composer
- Paul de la Gironière (1797–1862), traveller
- Julien de Lallande Poydras (1740–1824), New Orleans member of the United States House of Representatives, merchant, planter, financier, poet and educator
- Denys de La Patellière (1921–2013), film director and scriptwriter
- Charles-Auguste Lebourg (1829–1906), sculptor
- Hugo Leclercq, aka Madeon (born 1994), music producer and electronic music artist
- Pierre Le Faguays (1892–1962), sculptor
- Jean Leray (1906–1998), mathematician
- Héloïse Letissier (born 1988), (aka Christine and the Queen) singer
M
[edit]- Joseph Malègue (1876-1940), novelist
- Suzanne Malherbe (aka Marcel Moore), illustrator and designer
- Hugo Marchand, ballet dancer
- Pierre Mauget, professional footballer
- Amédée Ménard, sculptor
- Anne-Gabriel Meusnier de Querlon (1702–1780), man of letters
- Alice Milliat, pioneer od women's sport
- Anna Mouglalis, actress
P
[edit]- Claude Perron, actress
- Yvonne Pouzin (1884–1947), phthisiatrist, wife of Joseph Malègue
R
[edit]- Jules Edouard Roiné, sculptor and medallist
- Benoit Regent (1953–1994), actor
S
[edit]- Constance de Salm (1767–1845), poet and miscellaneous writer; through her second marriage, she became Princess of Salm-Dyck
- Alice Sauvrezis (1866–1946), composer, pianist, and choral conductor
T
[edit]- Éric Tabarly (1931–1998), sailor
- Sylvie Tellier (born 1978), model (Miss France 2002)
- Roger Tessier (born 1939), composer
- Jérémy Toulalan (born 1983), football player
- Auguste Toulmouche (1829-1890), painter
V
[edit]- Jules Verne, science fiction writer, traveller, lived in Nantes from birth to 1847 then went to Paris and shortly after returned to Nantes, where he stayed until July 1848
- Sandrine Voillet, art historian and television presenter
- Louis Vuillemin (1879–1929), composer
W
[edit]- Pierre Waldeck-Rousseau (1846–1904), politician
References
[edit]- ^ "Anne Of Brittany | Duchess of Brittany, French Royalty, 15th Century | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2024-07-01.
- ^ "Jean Marguerite Bachelier (1751-1843)". data.bnf.fr (in French). Retrieved 2024-07-01.
- ^ "Battaille, Charles-Amable | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2024-07-01.
- ^ Blondeau, Henri-Franck Beaupérin / Christophe. "Henri-Franck Beaupérin | Le site officiel d'Henri-Franck Beaupérin". www.beauperin.fr (in French). Retrieved 2024-07-01.