, 1783 , 1986 , 2014 , 2010 , 2007 , Rio 2016 ,2009
The Arts •
Nicolas Dipre (-1532), early
Renaissance painter. •
Trophime Bigot (1579 in Arles – 1650 in Avignon), French painter of the
Baroque era. •
Pierre Simon Jaillot (1631–1681), sculptor of ivory objects •
Pierre Parrocel (1664–1739), painter of the late-
Baroque period. •
Claude-Joseph Vernet (1714–1789), a painter of night landscapes. •
Dorothea von Rodde-Schlözer (1770 in Göttingen – 1825 in Avignon), artist and scholar. •
Pierre Grivolas (1823–1906), painter of landscapes, portraits and genre scenes. •
Émile Beaussier (1874–1943), painter of maritime scenes and sunny landscapes. •
Albert Gleizes (1881–1953), artist, theoretician, philosopher, self-proclaimed founder of
Cubism •
Yahel Chirinian (born 1970),
contemporary sculptor and installation artist
Music •
Justine Favart (1727–1772), an operatic singer, actress, playwright and dancer. •
Albert Guille (1854–1914), operatic tenor •
Emma Daumas (born 1983) , French singer, •
Marie Grisier-Montbazon (1859−1922), a French actress and singer. •
Olivier Messiaen (1908–1992), composer, organist, and ornithologist •
Jean-Claude Malgoire (1940–2018), oboist and later conductor. •
Mireille Mathieu (born 1946), singer •
Christophe Rousset (born 1961), harpsichordist and conductor of
Baroque music •
Peste Noire (formed 2000), a black metal band
Science & Business •
Procopius Waldvogel (15th C.), a medieval printer and silversmith by trade. •
Alexis-Hubert Jaillot (1632–1712), geographer and
cartographer •
Pierre-Esprit Radisson (1636/1640–1710), fur trader and explorer •
Esprit Pézenas (1692–1776), Jesuit astronomer, hydrographer and mathematician •
Honoré Blanc (1736–1801), gunsmith, pioneered the use of
interchangeable parts. •
Yves Delage (1854–1920), zoologist, worked on
invertebrate physiology and anatomy. •
Christine Ourmières-Widener (born 1964),
CEO of
TAP Air Portugal.
Public service & the Church •
Pope Gregory XI (ca.1329 – 1378), the seventh and last Avignon pope. •
Francis Lambert (ca.1486 – 1530), a Protestant reformer. •
Georges d'Armagnac (ca.1501 – 1585), humanist, patron of arts, Cardinal and diplomat •
Alexandre de Rhodes (1591–1664),
Jesuit missionary. •
Chevalier de Folard (1669–1752), soldier and military theorist, championed
infantry columns •
Louis des Balbes de Berton de Crillon (1717–1796),
Captain general of the Army. •
Étienne-Antoine Boulogne (1747–1825), cleric,
Bishop of Troyes, 1809–1825. •
Pierre Louis Jean Casimir de Blacas (1771–1839), antiquarian, nobleman and diplomat •
Joseph Agricol Viala (1778–1793), child hero in the
French Revolutionary Army, killed aged 15 •
John Stuart Mill (1806 – 1873 in Avignon), an English philosopher, political economist and MP; he is buried in the local cemetery. •
Édouard Daladier (1884–1970), politician and 3 x pre-war
Prime Minister of France •
Bernard Kouchner (born 1939), politician and doctor, co-founded
Médecins Sans Frontières •
Edmond Alphandéry (born 1943), politician, public-sector company executive •
Muriel Casals i Couturier (1945–2016), a Catalan economist and academic
Writing •
Bertran Folcon d'Avignon (fl. 1202–1233), a Provençal nobleman,
troubadour and poet •
Abraham Farissol (ca.1451 – ca.1525), a Jewish-Italian geographer, cosmographer, scribe and
polemicist. •
Marianne-Agnès Falques (1720–1785), author of romance novels and other topical writing •
Armand de Pontmartin (1811–1890), journalist, critic and man of letters. •
Henri Bosco (1888–1976), writer, nominated for the
Nobel Prize in Literature four times. •
Pierre Boulle (1912–1994), author of the novels:
The Bridge over the River Kwai and
Planet of the Apes •
René Girard (1923–2015), polymath, historian, literary critic and
philosopher of social science •
Daniel Arsand (born 1950), writer and publisher •
Mazarine Pingeot (born 1974), writer, journalist and associate Professor of philosophy at the
Paris 8 University and daughter of former French President
François Mitterrand. •
Vincent Almendros (born 1978), writer, winner of the 2015
prix Françoise Sagan Sport •
Philippe Gache (born 1962), racing driver •
Éric Di Meco (born 1963), former footballer with 342 club caps and 23 with
France •
Jean Alesi (born 1964), professional racing driver for
Formula 1 &
DTM •
Teddy Richert (born 1974), goalkeeper coach and former goalkeeper with 464 club caps •
Jean-Christophe Ravier (born 1979), racing driver •
Cédric Carrasso (born 1981), former footballer with 379 club caps •
Philippe Toledo (born 1983), former footballer with 449 club caps •
Camille Ayglon (born 1985), retired handballer with 270 caps with
France women and an
Olympic team silver medallist •
Benoît Richaud (born 1988), figure skating choreographer and former competitive ice dancer. •
Benoît Paire (born 1989), tennis player, best singles ranking is World No. 18, in January 2016 •
Younès Belhanda (born 1990), footballer with over 360 club caps and 58 for
Morocco •
Tony Gigot (born 1990), rugby league footballer with 233 club caps and 19 for
France •
Giuliano Alesi (born 1999),
Super Formula driver •
Clément Novalak (born 2000),
FIA Formula 2 driver •
Pierre-Louis Chovet (born 2002), racing driver == See also ==