A–C •
Alfredo Aceto (born 1991), visual artist •
Gustave Ador (1845–1928), statesman, President of the
Red Cross (ICRC) •
David Aebischer (born 1978), ice hockey goaltender, 2001
Stanley Cup champion •
Jacques-Laurent Agasse (1767–1849), animal and landscape painter •
Jeff Agoos (born 1968), retired American soccer defender, 134 caps for the
US team •
Henri-Frédéric Amiel (1821–1881), moral philosopher, poet and critic •
Gustave Amoudruz (1885–1963), sports shooter, bronze medallist at the
1920 Summer Olympics •
Adolphe Appia (1862–1928), architect and theorist of
stage lighting and décor. •
Ecaterina Arbore (1873–1937),
Romanian communist and
feminist,
People's Commissar for Health of the
Moldavian ASSR between 1924 and 1929. •
Philip Arditti (born c. 1980), British/Jewish Sephardic theatre and television actor •
Aimé Argand (1750–1803), physicist and chemist, invented the
Argand lamp •
Jean-Robert Argand (1768–1822), amateur mathematician, published the
Argand diagram •
Martha Argerich (born 1941), Argentine classical concert pianist •
John Armleder (born 1948), performance artist, painter, sculptor, critic and curator •
Germaine Aussey (1909–1979), née Agassiz, an actress of Swiss origin who settled in Geneva in 1960 •
Alexandre Bardinon (born 2002), racing driver •
Pierre Bardinon (1931–2012), businessman and car collector •
Jean-Pierre Berenger (1737–1807), editor, writer and historian •
Mathias Beche (born 1986), racing driver •
Jean-Luc Bideau (born 1940), film actor •
Celia von Bismarck (1971–2010), humanitarian and ambassador of the
Swiss Red Cross •
Ernest Bloch (1880–1959), US composer of Swiss origin •
Roger Bocquet (1921–1994), footballer who won 48 caps for Switzerland •
Raoul Marie Joseph Count de Boigne (1862–1949), a French sports shooter, bronze medallist at the
1908 Summer Olympics •
Caroline Boissier-Butini (1786–1836), pianist and composer •
François Bonivard (1493–1570), Geneva ecclesiastic, historian and libertine •
Charles Bonnet (1720–1793), naturalist and philosophical writer •
Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986), Argentine short-story writer, studied at the
Collège de Genève •
Marc-Théodore Bourrit (1739–1819), traveller and writer •
Nicolas Bouvier (1929–1998), writer and photographer •
Clotilde Bressler-Gianoli (1875–1912), an Italian opera singer •
Christiane Brunner (1947-2025), politician, lawyer and trade union champion •
Mickaël Buffaz (born 1979), French cyclist •
Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui (1694–1748), Genevan legal and political theorist •
Cécile Butticaz (1884–1966), engineer •
Kate Burton (born 1957), actress, the daughter of actor
Richard Burton •
John Calvin (1509–1564), influential theologian, reformer •
Augustin Pyramus de Candolle (1778–1841), botanist, worked on plant classification •
Clint Capela (born 1994), professional basketball player •
Jean de Carro (1770–1857), Vienna-based physician, promoted vaccination against smallpox •
Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614), a classical scholar and philologist •
Méric Casaubon (1599–1671), son of
Isaac Casaubon, a French-English classical scholar •
Mike Castro de Maria (born 1972), electronic music composer •
Jean-Jacques Challet-Venel (1811–1893), politician, on the
Swiss Federal Council 1864–1872 •
Alfred Edward Chalon RA (1780–1860), portrait painter •
John James Chalon RA (1778–1854), painter of landscapes, marine scenes and animal life •
Marguerite Champendal (1870–1928), first Genevan to have obtained her doctorate in medicine at the University of Geneva (1900) •
Henri Christiné (1867–1941), French composer of sparkling, witty, jazzy musical plays •
Victor Cherbuliez (1829–1899), novelist and author •
Étienne Clavière (1735–1793), banker and politician of the French revolution •
Paulo Coelho (born 1947), Brazilian lyricist and novelist, author of
The Alchemist, residing in Geneva •
Renée Colliard (1933–2022), former alpine skier, gold medallist at the
1956 Winter Olympics •
Gabriel Cramer (1704–1752), Genevan mathematician
D–G •
Maryam d'Abo (born 1960), English film and TV actress and
Bond girl •
Jacques-Antoine Dassier (1715–1759), a Genevan medallist, active in London •
Michel Decastel (born 1955), football manager and midfielder, 314 club caps, 19 for
Switzerland •
Jean-Denis Delétraz (born 1963), racing driver •
Louis Delétraz (born 1997), racing driver •
Jean-Louis de Lolme (1740–1806), lawyer and constitutional writer •
Jean-André Deluc (1727–1817), geologist, natural philosopher and meteorologist •
Joël Dicker (born 1985), author and novelist •
Giovanni Diodati (1576–1649), Italian Calvinist theologian and Bible translator •
Élie Ducommun (1833–1906), peace activist, 1902
Nobel Peace Prize winner •
Armand Dufaux (1833–1941), aviation pioneer, flew the length of
Lake Geneva in 1910 •
Henri Dufaux (1879–1980), French-Swiss aviation pioneer, inventor, painter and politician •
Pierre Étienne Louis Dumont (1759–1829), Genevan political writer •
Henry Dunant (1828–1910), founded the
Red Cross, first recipient of
Nobel Peace Prize in 1901 •
Emmanuel-Étienne Duvillard (1775–1832), Swiss economist •
Isabelle Eberhardt (1877–1904), Russian-Swiss explorer and travel writer •
Empress Elisabeth of Austria (1837–1898), Empress of Austria and Queen of Hungary •
Emanuele Filiberto of Savoy, Prince of Venice (born 1972), a member of the
House of Savoy •
Louis Favre (1826–1879), engineer, responsible for the construction of the
Gotthard Tunnel •
Philippe Favre (1961–2013), racing driver •
Henri Fazy (1842–1920), politician and historian •
Edmond Fleg, born Flegenheimer (1874–1963), a Swiss-French writer, thinker, novelist, essayist and playwright •
Ian Fleming (1908–1964), author (James Bond), studied psychology briefly in Geneva in 1931 •
Sylvie Fleury (born 1961), a contemporary object artist of
installation art and
mixed media • Sir
Augustus Wollaston Franks KCB FRS FSA (1826–1897), English antiquary and museum administrator •
Pierre-Victor Galland (1822–1892), painter •
Albert Gallatin (1761–1849), an American politician of
Genevan origin, diplomat, ethnologist and linguist •
Agénor de Gasparin (1810–1871), French statesman and author, also researched
table-turning •
Valérie de Gasparin (1813–1894), woman of letters, regards freedom, equality and creativity •
François Gaussen (1790–1863), Protestant divine •
Victor Gautier (1824–1890), Swiss physician •
Marcel Golay (1927–2015), astronomer •
Claude Goretta (1929–2019), film director and television producer •
Emilie Gourd (1879–1946), journalist and activist for
Women's suffrage in Switzerland •
Isabelle Graesslé (born 1959), theologian, feminist and former museum director, moderator of ministers and deacons at the
Protestant Church of Geneva •
Kat Graham (born 1989), actress, singer, and model, she plays
Bonnie Bennett in
The Vampire Diaries •
Cédric Grand (born 1976), bobsledder, competed in four Winter Olympics, bronze medallist at the
2006 Winter Olympics •
Romain Grosjean (born 1986), former Formula 1 racing driver, currently racing for
Andretti Autosport in the
IndyCar Series. He is mainly known for his massive crash at the
2020 Bahrain Grand Prix.
H–M • Admiral of the Fleet
Lord John Hay GCB (1827–1916), Royal Navy officer and politician •
Abraham Hermanjat (1862–1932), painter who worked in the
Fauvist and
Divisionist styles •
Germain Henri Hess (1802–1850), Swiss-Russian chemist and doctor, formulated
Hess's law •
Gary Hirsch (born 1987), racing driver •
Hector Hodler (1887–1920),
Esperantist •
Fulk Greville Howard (1773–1846), English politician •
Jean Huber (1721–1786), painter, silhouettiste, soldier and author •
François Huber (1750–1831), naturalist, studied the respiration of bees •
Marie Huber (1695–1753), translator, editor and author of theological works •
Pierre Jeanneret (1896–1967), architect, collaborated with his cousin
Le Corbusier •
Thomas Jouannet (born 1970), actor •
Charles Journet (1891–1975), cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church •
Louis Jurine (1751–1819), physician, surgeon, naturalist and entomologist •
Sonia Kacem (born 1985), Swiss-born visual artist •
Michael Krausz (1942–2025), American philosopher, an artist and orchestral conductor •
Adrien Lachenal (1849–1918), politician,
Federal Council of Switzerland 1892–1899 •
François Lachenal (1918–1997), publisher and diplomat •
Paul Lachenal (1884–1955), politician, co-founded
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande •
Marie Laforêt (1939–2019), French singer and actress •
Sarah Lahbati (born 1993), actress and singer •
François Le Fort (1656–1699), first Russian Admiral •
Georges-Louis Le Sage (1724–1803), physicist,
Le Sage's theory of gravitation •
Jean Leclerc (1657–1736), theologian and biblical scholar, promoted
exegesis •
Henri Leconte (born 1963), former French professional tennis player, men's singles finalist, French Open 1988 •
Philippe Le Royer (1816–1897), French and Swiss politician and lawyer, served France as the Minister of Justice and President of the Senate •
Vladimir Lenin (1870–1924), lived in Geneva 1902–1905 as an exile from the
Russian Empire •
Jean-Étienne Liotard (1702–1789), painter, art connoisseur and dealer •
Corinne Maier (born 1963), psychoanalyst, economist, and best-selling writer •
Ella Maillart (1903–1997), adventurer, travel writer and photographer, as well as a sportswoman •
Solomon Caesar Malan (1812–1894), oriental linguist and biblical scholar •
Jacques Mallet du Pan (1749–1800), Genevan-French royalist journalist •
Alexander Marcet FRS (1770–1822), physician who became a British citizen in 1800 •
Jane Marcet (1769–1858), innovative writer of popular introductory science books •
Sebastian Marka (born 1978), German film director and editor •
Frank Martin (1890–1974), composer, editor of
The Statesman's Year Book •
Nicolas Maulini (born 1981), racing driver •
Théodore Maunoir (1806–1869), co-founder of the
International Committee of the Red Cross •
Amélie Mauresmo (born 1979), former professional tennis player and former world No.1 •
Barthélemy Menn (1815–1893), landscape painter, introduced painting
en plein air •
Alain Menu (born 1963), racing driver •
Heinrich Menu von Minutoli (1772–1846), Prussian Generalmajor, explorer and archaeologist •
Nancy Mérienne (1793–1860), Swiss painter •
Roman Mityukov (born 2000), Swiss
2020 Olympic swimmer •
Jacques-Barthélemy Micheli du Crest (1690–1766), military engineer, physicist and cartographer •
Giorgio Mondini (born 1980), racing driver •
Stephanie Morgenstern (born 1965), Canadian actress, filmmaker and screenwriter •
Edoardo Mortara (born 1987), Swiss-Italian racing driver •
Thierry Moutinho (born 1991), Swiss-Portuguese footballer •
Gustave Moynier (1826–1910), lawyer and co-founder of the
Red Cross N–R •
Jacques Necker (1732–1804), banker and finance minister for
Louis XVI •
Louis Albert Necker (1786–1861), crystallographer and geographer, devised the
Necker cube •
Felix Neff (1798–1829), Protestant divine and philanthropist •
Alfred Newton FRS HFRSE (1829–1907), English zoologist and ornithologist •
Karim Ojjeh (born 1965), Saudi Arabian businessman and racing driver •
Julie Ordon (born 1984), model and actress •
Rémy Pagani (born 1954), politician, Mayor of Geneva 2009/10 and 2012/13 •
Liliane Maury Pasquier (born 1956), politician •
PATjE (born 1970), birth name Patrice Jauffret, singer-songwriter, and musician • Faule Petitot (1572–1629), sculptor, cabinetmaker and architect, citizen of Geneva since 1615 •
Jean Petitot (1607–1691), enamel painter, son of Faule •
Carmen Perrin (born 1953), Bolivian-born Swiss visual artist, designer, and educator •
Jean Piaget (1896–1980), clinical psychologist, devised
genetic epistemology •
Robert Pinget (1919–1997), avant-garde French
modernist nouveau roman writer •
George Pitt, 1st Baron Rivers (1721–1803), English diplomat and politician •
Barbara Polla (born 1950), medical doctor, gallery owner, art curator and writer •
James Pradier (1790–1852),
Genevan and then Swiss sculptor,
neoclassical style •
Jean-Louis Prévost (1838–1927), neurologist and physiologist •
Pierre Prévost (1751–1839), philosopher, physicist wrote the law of exchange in radiation •
Tariq Ramadan (born 1962), Swiss Muslim academic, philosopher and writer •
Marcel Raymond (1897–1981), literary critic of French literature of the "
Geneva School" •
Flore Revalles (1889–1966), singer, dancer and actress •
Charles Pierre Henri Rieu (1820–1902), Orientalist and Professor of Arabic •
Auguste Arthur de la Rive (1801–1873), physicist, worked on the heat of gases •
Charles-Gaspard de la Rive (1770–1834), physicist, psychiatrist and politician •
François Jules Pictet de la Rive (1809–1872), zoologist and palaeontologist •
Andree Aeschlimann Rochat (1900–1900), composer and music critic •
Suzanne Rohr (born 1939), watch enameller •
Tibor Rosenbaum (1923–1980), rabbi and businessman •
Marc Rosset (born 1970), former pro tennis player, gold medallist at the
1992 Olympic Games •
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778), writer and philosopher •
Jean Rousset (1910–2002), literary critic and early
structuralism writer of the
Geneva School •
Xavier Ruiz (born 1970), film producer and director
S–Z •
Ferdinand de Saussure (1857–1913), linguist and
semiotician •
Horace Bénédict de Saussure (1740–1799), geologist, meteorologist, physicist, and Alpine explorer •
Nicolas-Théodore de Saussure (1767–1845), chemist, studied plant physiology, advanced phytochemistry •
Léon Savary (1895–1968), writer and journalist •
Michael Schade (born 1965), Canadian operatic tenor •
Johann Jacob Schweppe (1740–1821), watchmaker developed
Schweppes bottled
carbonated water •
Marguerite Sechehaye (1887–1965), psychotherapist, treated people with
schizophrenia •
Louis Segond (1810–1885), theologian and translator, pastor in
Chêne-Bougeries •
Philippe Senderos (born 1985), footballer, over 200 club caps and 57 for
Switzerland •
Jean Senebier (1742–1809), pastor and voluminous writer on vegetable physiology •
Liberato Firmino Sifonia (1917–1996), Italian composer •
Pierre Eugene du Simitiere (1737–1784), naturalist, American patriot and portrait painter. •
Michel Simon (1895–1975), actor •
Jean Charles Léonard de Sismondi (1773–1842), historian and political economist •
Edward Snowden (born 1983), lived in Geneva between 2007 and 2009, while working for the
CIA •
Pierre Soubeyran (1706–1775), engraver, etcher and
Encyclopédiste •
Terry Southern (1924–1995), American author, essayist and screenwriter; lived in Geneva 1956–59 •
Ezekiel Spanheim (1629–1710), Prussian diplomat •
Friedrich Spanheim (1632–1701), Calvinistic theology professor at the
University of Leiden •
George Steiner (1929–2020), Franco-American essayist, taught comparative literature at the University of Geneva (1974–94) •
Jacques Charles François Sturm (1803–1855), French mathematician •
Émile Taddéoli (1879–1920), Swiss aviation pioneer •
Alain Tanner (1929–2022), film director •
Sigismund Thalberg (1812–1871), Austrian composer and pianist •
Max Thurian (1921–1996), theologian, known as Frère Max •
Pierre Tirard (1827–1893), French politician •
Rodolphe Töpffer (1799–1846), teacher, author, painter, cartoonist and caricaturist •
Wolfgang-Adam Töpffer (1766–1847), painter of landscapes and watercolors •
Vico Torriani (1920–1998), singer, actor, show host •
Georges Trombert (1874–1949), French fencer, silver and bronze medallist at the
1920 Summer Olympics •
Théodore Tronchin (1709–1781), Genevan physician •
François Turrettini (1623–1687), Genevan-Italian Reformed scholastic theologian •
Jean Alphonse Turrettini (1671–1737), reformed theologian •
Princess Vittoria of Savoy (2003), heir to the
Italian throne •
François Vivares (1709–1780), French landscape-engraver, active in England •
Johann Vogel (born 1977), former footballer, played 94 games for
Switzerland •
Bailey Voisin (born 2003), British racing driver •
Callum Voisin (born 2006), British racing driver • Prince
Andrei Volkonsky (1933–2008), Russian composer of classical music and harpsichordist •
Voltaire (1694–1778), French philosopher, historian, dramatist and man of letters; lived at
Les Délices 1755–1760 •
Nedd Willard (1926–2018), writer •
R. Norris Williams (1891–1968), American tennis player and
RMS Titanic survivor •
Pierre Wissmer (1915–1992), Swiss-French composer, pianist and music teacher •
Jean Ziegler (born 1934), politician and sociologist •
Reto Ziegler (born 1986), footballer, has played 35 games for
Switzerland == See also ==