List of French people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

French people of note include:

Actors[]

A–C[]

  • Isabelle Adjani
  • Renée Adorée
  • Anouk Aimée
  • Flo Ankah
  • Arletty
  • Antonin Artaud
  • Fanny Ardant
  • Jeanne Aubert
  • Jean-Louis Aubert
  • Jean-Pierre Aumont
  • Claude Autant-Lara
  • Daniel Auteuil
  • Charles Aznavour
  • Brigitte Bardot
  • Emmanuelle Béart
  • Loleh Bellon
  • Jean-Paul Belmondo
  • François Berléand
  • Charles Berling
  • Suzanne Bianchetti
  • Juliette Binoche
  • Bernard Blier
  • Sandrine Bonnaire
  • Élodie Bouchez
  • Bourvil
  • Dany Boon
  • Angelique Boyer
  • Charles Boyer
  • Guillaume Canet
  • Capucine
  • Martine Carol
  • Leslie Caron
  • Isabelle Carré
  • Vincent Cassel
  • Jean-Pierre Cassel
  • Laetitia Casta
  • Robert Clary
  • Grégoire Colin
  • Marion Cotillard
  • Clotilde Courau
  • Darry Cowl

D–L[]

M–Z[]

Architects[]

Artists[]

Auguste Rodin

Painters[]

Photographers[]

Sculptors[]

Athletes[]

A–J[]

Sarah Abitbol
  • André the Giant, professional wrestler
  • Sarah Abitbol, pairs figure skater (with Stéphane Bernadis); World Figure Skating Championship bronze[1]
  • Tariq Abdul-Wahad (born Olivier Saint-Jean), basketball player
  • Luc Alphand, Alpine skier
  • Jacques Anquetil, cyclist
  • Jonathan Assous, France/Israel, defensive midfielder (Beitar Ramat Gan)[2]
  • Fabien Barthez, football player
  • Elliot Benchetrit, tennis player
  • Brice Blanc, jockey
  • Marion Bartoli, tennis player
  • Fabrice Benichou, world-champion super bantamweight boxer
  • Stéphane Bernadis, pairs figure skater (with Sarah Abitbol)
  • Alain Bernard, Olympic swimmer
  • Serge Betsen, Cameroon-born French citizen, rugby player
  • Serge Blanco, Venezuela-born French citizen, rugby player
  • Jean Bloch, Olympic silver football player
  • Louison Bobet, cyclist
  • Surya Bonaly, figure skater
  • Sébastien Bourdais, Indycar driver
  • Frédéric Bourdillon (born 1991), French-Israeli basketball player in the Israel Basketball Premier League
  • Andrée Brunet and Pierre Brunet, 1928 and 1932 Olympic skating gold medalists
  • Jean-Luc Cairon (born 1962), gymnast and coach
  • Alain Calmat, figure skater, Olympic silver, world championship gold, silver, two-time bronze
  • Philippe Candeloro, figure skater
  • Eric Cantona, football player
  • Georges Carpentier, world-champion boxer
  • Marcel Cerdan, world-champion boxer
  • François Cevert (born François Goldenberg), Formula One driver
  • Eugène Christophe, cyclist
  • Albert Clément (c. 1878–1907), motor racing driver
  • Robert Cohen, world-champion bantamweight boxer
  • Stéphanie Cohen-Aloro, tennis player
  • Eugène Criqui, world-champion boxer
  • Jean Cruguet, jockey of Seattle Slew
  • Richard Dacoury, basketball player
  • Pierre Darmon, tennis player, highest world ranking # 8
  • André Darrigade, cyclist
  • Mathieu Debuchy, football player
  • Émile Delahaye, race car pioneer
  • Marcel Desailly, Ghana-born French citizen, football player
  • Abou Diaby, football player
  • Boris Diaw, basketball player
  • David Douillet, judoka
  • Yves Dreyfus, épée fencer, Olympic bronze medal, French champion
  • Isabelle Duchesnay and Paul Duchesnay, ice dancers
  • Alojzy Ehrlich, Poland, table tennis, 3x won silver and 1x won bronze in the World Championships, incarcerated by the Nazis in Auschwitz, represented France after 1945.
  • Andre Ethier, Major League Baseball outfielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers
  • Patrice Evra, football player for Monaco and Manchester United
  • André Fabre, horse trainer
  • Evan Fournier, basketball player
  • Laurent Fignon, cyclist
  • Jeremy Flores, surfer
  • Just Fontaine, football player
  • Jacques Fouroux, rugby union player and coach
  • Jessica Fox (born 1994), French-born Australian, slalom canoer, Olympic silver (K-1 slalom), world championships bronze (C-1)[3]
  • Myriam Fox-Jerusalmi, slalom canoer, Olympic bronze (K-1 slalom), five golds at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships (two-time K-1, three-time K-1 team)
  • Pierre Galle, basketball player and coach
  • Pierre Gasly, racing driver currently competing in Formula One with Scuderia AlphaTauri
  • Camille du Gast, race car driver
  • Lucien Gaudin, fencer
  • Fabien Gilot, Olympic and world champion swimmer
  • Yoann Gourcuff, football player
  • Stéphane Haccoun, boxer
  • Rudy Haddad, soccer midfielder (Hapoel Ashkelon & U21 national team)[4]
  • Alphonse Halimi ("la Petite Terreur"), world-champion bantamweight boxer
  • Marlène Harnois (born 1986), taekwondo practitioner
  • Thierry Henry, football player
  • Bernard Hinault, cyclist
  • Jaylen Hoard, basketball player
  • Pierre Houseaux, triathlete
  • Cristobal Huet, hockey player
  • Constant Huret, cyclist
  • Olivier Jacque, motorcycle rider
  • Rene Jacquot, boxer, underdog who became world champion
  • Laurent Jalabert, cyclist
  • Max Jean, Formula One driver
  • Brian Joubert, figure skater
  • Natan Jurkovitz (born 1995), French-Swiss-Israeli basketball player for Hapoel Be'er Sheva of the Israeli Basketball Premier League

K–Z[]

  • Jean-Claude Killy (born 1943), skier
  • Raymond Kopa, football player
  • Pascal Lavanchy, ice dancer (with Sophie Moniotte)
  • Suzanne Lenglen, tennis player
  • Alexander Lévy (born 1990), American-born professional golfer
  • Alexandre Lippmann (1881–1960), épée fencer, two-time Olympic champion, two-time silver, bronze
  • Bixente Lizarazu, football player
  • Sébastien Loeb (born 1974), rally driver and five-time champion
  • Jeannie Longo, cyclist
  • Mickaël Madar (born 1968), footballer
  • André Mahé, cyclist
  • Claude Makélélé, football player
  • Laure Manaudou, swimmer
  • Amélie Mauresmo, tennis player
  • Jacques Mayol, freediver
  • Jose Meiffret, cyclist
  • Éric Millot, figure skater
  • Alain Mimoun, athlete
  • Sophie Moniotte, ice dancer (with Pascal Lavanchy)
  • Carole Montillet, skier
  • Armand Mouyal (1925–1988), épée fencer, Olympic bronze, world champion
  • Alfred "Artem" Nakache (1915–1983), swimmer, world record (200 m breaststroke), one-third of French two-time world record (3x100 relay team)
  • Claude Netter (1924–2007), foil fencer, Olympic champion, silver
  • Hellé Nice, pioneer female race car driver
  • Joakim Noah, NBA basketball player (Chicago Bulls)
  • Yannick Noah, tennis player
  • Jacques Ochs (1883–1971), French-born Belgian artist and Olympic fencing champion
  • Micheline Ostermeyer, Olympic champion in discus and shot put, bronze in high jump
  • Frédéric Ouvret (born 1970), former professional footballer
  • Simon Pagenaud, Indycar driver[5]
  • Tony Parker, Belgian-born French citizen, basketball player
  • Gwendal Peizerat, ice dancer
  • Marie-José Pérec, athlete
  • Mary Pierce, Canadian-born French citizen, tennis player
  • Stéphane Peterhansel, car and motor racer, nine-time Dakar Rally winner
  • Julien Pillet, fencer
  • Michel Platini, football player
  • Alain Prost, Formula One driver and four-time champion
  • Antoine Rigaudeau, basketball player
  • François Rozenthal (born 1975), ice hockey player
  • Maurice Rozenthal (born 1975), ice hockey player
  • Georges Stern (1882–1928), jockey
  • Jean Stern (1875–1962), épée fencer, Olympic champion
  • Léon Théry, race car driver
  • Marcel Thil, world-champion boxer
  • Christophe Tiozzo, world-champion boxer; brother of Fabrice Tiozzo
  • Fabrice Tiozzo, world-champion boxer; brother of Christophe Tiozzo
  • David Trezeguet, football player
  • Tristan Vautier, Indycar driver
  • Patrick Vieira, Senegal-born French citizen, football player
  • Richard Virenque, Morocco-born French citizen, cyclist
  • Roger Walkowiak, cyclist
  • Jean-Pierre Wimille, race car driver
  • Albert Wolff (1906–1989), French-born American Olympic fencer
  • Zinedine Zidane, football player

Authors[]

A–E[]

F–O[]

Victor Hugo

P–Z[]

Aviators[]

Business[]

  • Bernard Arnault (born 1949), entrepreneur
  • Liliane Bettencourt, cosmetics
  • Marcel Bich (1914–1994), Bic pens
  • Vincent Bolloré (born 1952), transportation and engineering
  • Marcel Boussac, textiles, fashion, newspapers, race horse breeding
  • Anne Bouverot (born 1966), telecommunications business executive
  • Ettore Bugatti (1881–1947), automobile manufacturer
  • André Citroën (1878–1935), automobile manufacturer
  • Adolphe Clément-Bayard (1855–1928), transportation manufacturer
  • Marcel Dassault (1892–1986), aviation
  • Alexandre Darracq (1855–1931), automotive pioneer
  • Claude Dauphin (born 1951), commodities trader
  • Pierre Dauzier (1939–2007), businessman, former president of Havas
  • Louis Delâge (1874–1947), automotive pioneer
  • Émile Delahaye (1843–1905), automotive pioneer
  • Gérard Louis-Dreyfus (born 1932), agricultural commodities
  • Eleuthère Irénée du Pont de Nemours (1771–1834), founder of DuPont
  • Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours (1739–1817), entrepreneur
  • Jacques Foccart (?–1997), import-export
  • Léon Gaumont, pioneer film inventor
  • Paul-Louis Halley (1934–2004), supermarket tycoon
  • Max Hymans (1900–1961), aviation
  • Jean-Marie Messier (born 1957), former Vivendi CEO
  • Gérard Mestrallet (born 1949), chairman and CEO of Suez
  • Gérard Mulliez, entrepreneur
  • Xavier Niel (born 1967), entrepreneur and businessman at Iliad
  • Charles Pathé, film industry pioneer
  • Armand Peugeot (1849–1915), automobile manufacturer
  • François Pinault (born 1936), entrepreneur
  • Jacques-Donatien Le Ray de Chaumont (1726–1803), shipping magnate and a "Father of the American Revolution"
  • Marcel Renault (1872–1903), Co-founder of automobile manufacturer Renault[6]
  • César Ritz, hotelier
  • James Mayer de Rothschild (1792–1868), banker
  • Philippe de Rothschild (1902–1988), wine maker
  • Eugène Schueller (1881–1954), founder of L'Oréal
  • Bernard Tapie (born 1943), entrepreneur
  • Pierre Vidoue (c.1490–1543), Parisian printer and bookseller

Chefs[]

Colonial administrators[]

  • Félix Éboué, Governor General of French Equatorial Africa
  • Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza, French Congo
  • Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, Louisiana
  • Samuel de Champlain, New France
  • François Caron, first Governor of French territories of India
  • François Martin, Governor for French territories in India
  • Pierre Christoph Le Noir, Governor for French territories in India
  • Pierre Benoît Dumas, Governor for French territories in India
  • Bertrand-François Mahé de La Bourdonnais, French naval officer and administrator, in the service of the French East India Company.
  • Joseph François Dupleix, Governor for French territories in India
  • Lally-Tollendal, Governor for French territories in India
  • Marquis de Bussy-Castelnau, Governor for French territories in India
  • Louis Faidherbe, Senegal
  • Joseph Gallieni, Madagascar
  • Francis Garnier, French Indochina (Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos)
  • Émile Gentil, French Congo
  • Louis Hubert Gonzalve Lyautey, Algeria
  • Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville, Louisiana
  • Jean Talon, Canada

Composers[]

Craftspeople and inventors[]

Criminals[]

For collaboration with Nazi Germany see also the politicians section.

  • Jacques de Bernonville (1897–1972), war criminal sentenced to death
  • Jules Bonnot
  • Émile Louis
  • Henri Désiré Landru, serial killer
  • Jacques Mesrine
  • Zacarias Moussaoui
  • Maurice Papon, politician and war criminal
  • Marcel Petiot, serial killer
  • Gilles de Rais, prolific serial killer
  • Jean-Claude Romand, murderer
  • Albert Spaggiari
  • Charles Sobhraj, killer
  • Paul Touvier, one of only two Frenchmen to be convicted of crimes against humanity

Dancers[]

Economists[]

Fashion[]

Filmmakers[]

  • Olivier Assayas
  • Jacques Becker
  • Jean-Jacques Beineix
  • Luc Besson
  • Yves Billon
  • Alice Guy-Blaché
  • Bertrand Blier
  • Patrick Bokanowski
  • Catherine Breillat
  • Robert Bresson
  • Laurent Cantet
  • Yves Caumon
  • André Cayatte
  • Claude Chabrol
  • Jean-Paul Civeyrac
  • René Clair
  • René Clément
  • Henri-Georges Clouzot
  • Jean Cocteau
  • Fabien Cousteau
  • Jacques Cousteau
  • Jacques Demy
  • Claire Denis
  • Henri Diamant-Berger
  • Abel Gance
  • Jean-Luc Godard
  • Michel Gondry
  • Michel Hazanavicius
  • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
  • Mathieu Kassovitz
  • Jan Kounen
  • Patrice Leconte
  • Claude Lelouch
  • Philippe Lioret
  • Louis Malle
  • André Malraux
  • Georges Méliès
  • Jean-Pierre Melville
  • Maurice Pialat
  • Jean Renoir
  • Alain Resnais
  • Jacques Rivette
  • Yves Robert
  • Éric Rohmer
  • Jean Rollin
  • Alain Sarde
  • Claude Sautet
  • Straub-Huillet
  • Jacques Tati
  • Jacques Tourneur
  • Maurice Tourneur
  • François Truffaut
  • Roger Vadim
  • Agnès Varda
  • Jean Vigo

Humorists[]

  • Alain Chabat
  • Coluche
  • Pierre Dac, humorist and Resistance worker
  • Jamel Debbouze
  • Pierre Desproges
  • Raymond Devos
  • Gad Elmaleh
  • Florence Foresti
  • Thierry Le Luron
  • Dieudonné M'bala M'bala
  • Elie Semoun
  • Cabu
  • Stef and Jim

Military leaders[]

Monarchs and royals[]

  • Charles X
  • Charlemagne
  • Charles Martel
  • Philip IV the Fair
  • King Francis I
  • King Henry IV
  • Louis XIV, the Sun King, reigned 1643–1715
  • Henriette Marie, Queen of England, wife of Charles I of England and mother to Charles II and James II
  • Philip V of Spain, grandson of Louis XIV through male line, born and bred in France, became King of Spain aged 17
  • King Louis XV, reigned 1715–1774
  • King Louis XVI, reigned 1774–1792, executed in 1793 in Revolution
  • Emperor Napoleon, first to be styled 'Emperor of the French', reigned 1799–1814 and again in 1815
  • Joséphine de Beauharnais, first wife of above
  • King Louis Philippe, only monarch styled King of the French; reigned 1830–1848
  • Napoleon III, nephew of Napoleon I, President (1848–1852) and Emperor (1852–1871); last French monarch
  • Charles-Marie David de Mayréna I, King of the Kingdom of Sedang
  • Henri Marie Jean André, Prince Consort of Denmark, married to Margrethe II of Denmark.
  • Marie Agathe Odile Cavallier, Princess of Denmark, married to Prince Joachim of Denmark

Musicians[]

A–J[]

K–Z[]

  • Patricia Kaas
  • Kassav'
  • Kavinsky
  • Rina Ketty
  • Kiki, "Queen of Montparnasse"
  • La Goulue
  • Larusso
  • Boby Lapointe
  • Bernard Lavilliers
  • Maxime Le Forestier
  • Sébastien Lefebvre
  • Gérard Lenorman
  • Nolwenn Leroy
  • Lilly Wood and the Prick
  • Claudine Longet
  • Didier Lucchesi
  • Sheryfa Luna
  • M83
  • Madeon
  • Christophe Maé
  • Mano Negra
  • Luis Mariano
  • Anna Marly
  • Alain Marion
  • Didier Marouani, musician and composer
  • Mireille Mathieu
  • Félix Mayol
  • Miossec
  • Mireille
  • Mistinguett
  • Ginette Neveu
  • Yannick Noah
  • Claude Nougaro
  • NTM
  • Noir Désir
  • Vanessa Paradis
  • Pierre Perret
  • Michel Petrucciani
  • Édith Piaf
  • Michel Polnareff
  • Lily Pons, opera singer (naturalized as a United States citizen in 1940)
  • Rene Rancourt
  • Renaud
  • Tino Rossi
  • Jean Sablon
  • David Serero
  • Bob Sinclar
  • Skip the Use
  • Alain Souchon
  • Mano Solo
  • Jeff Stinco
  • Sébastien Tellier
  • Yann Tiersen
  • Charles Trenet
  • Christian Vander
  • Sylvie Vartan
  • Boris Vian
  • Pauline Viardot, opera singer and composer
  • Pedro Winter
  • Zazie

Philosophers[]

Politicians[]

  • Robert Badinter, lawyer, statesman and anti-death-sentence activist
  • François Bayrou, UDF party leader
  • Léon Blum, politician, Socialist party leader, prime minister
  • José Bové, anti-globalization activist, altermondialist
  • Aristide Briand
  • Jacques Chirac, politician, member of center-right wing party, former city mayor of Paris, two-term French president
  • Georges Clemenceau
  • Gaspard de Coligny
  • Bertrand Delanoë, mayor of Paris
  • Jacques Delors
  • Félix Faure, President of France who died of a heart attack while making love to his mistress
  • Charles de Gaulle, World War II general, commander of the Free French Forces, heroic French president
  • Valéry Giscard d'Estaing
  • François Guizot, Prime Minister
  • Gisèle Halimi, lawyer and feminist activist
  • François Hollande, former PS (Socialist Party) leader, former French president (15 May 2012 – 14 May 2017)
  • Jean Jaurès, politician, pacifist
  • Lionel Jospin, socialist, former prime minister
  • Bernard Kouchner, founder of Médecins du Monde
  • Jean-Marie Le Pen, leader of the extreme right party in France, Front National, presidential candidate
  • Louis Lépine, Paris police chief, governor of Algiers, founder of the Concours Lépine
  • Émile Loubet, President of France who was elected in 1899, after the death of Félix Faure
  • Henri-Auguste Lozé, Paris police chief, senator of the Third Republic
  • Emmanuel Macron, founder and current President of En Marche, current President of France (from 14 May 2017)
  • Jean-Paul Marat, politician during the Revolution, journalist, physician, scientist
  • Jean-Claude Martinez, lawyer and European deputy
  • Pierre Mendès France, lawyer and statesman, prime minister
  • Honoré Mirabeau
  • François Mitterrand, lawyer and statesman, president
  • Jean Monnet
  • Philippe Pétain, head of Vichy France
  • Alexandre de Prouville, Viceroy of New France
  • Marthe Richard
  • Maximilien Robespierre, statesman and major figure in the French Revolution
  • Gilberte Roca (1911–2004), Communist
  • Ségolène Royal, politician, Socialist party, presidential candidate
  • Nicolas Sarkozy, politician, President of the right wing party
  • Victor Schœlcher, anti-slavery activist
  • Charles Maurice de Talleyrand
  • Maurice Thorez
  • Jacques Toubon
  • Dominique de Villepin, former Prime Minister of France
  • Dominique Voynet, physician and Green party politician

Popes[]

Resistance workers[]

Resistance workers during the German occupation of France in World War II

  • Lucie Samuel-Aubrac (1912–2007), human rights activist
  • Raymond Aubrac (born 1914), statesman
  • Robert Benoist (1895–1944), SOE operative, champion race car driver
  • Denise Bloch (1915–1945), SOE operative: King's Commendation for Brave Conduct, Legion of Honor, French Resistance Medal
  • Andrée Borrel (1919–1944), SOE operative: Croix de guerre
  • Madeleine Damerment (1917–1944), SOE operative: Legion of Honor, Croix de guerre, Médaille combattant volontaire de la Résistance
  • Marie Louise Dissard (1880–1957), U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient
  • William Grover-Williams (1903–1945), SOE operative, champion race car driver
  • Cecily Lefort (1900–1945), SOE operative: Croix de guerre
  • Pierre Mendès France (1907–1982), lawyer, statesman
  • Jean Moulin (1899–1943), statesman
  • Agnès de La Barre de Nanteuil (1922–1944), assisted allied airmen
  • Abbé Pierre (1912–2007), Priest and founder of Emmaus
  • Christian Pineau (1904–1995), statesman
  • Eliane Plewman (1917–1944), SOE operative: Croix de guerre
  • Germaine Ribière (1917–1999), Righteous among the Nations
  • Élise Rivet (1890–1945), nun executed by Nazis for aiding the resistance
  • Lilian Rolfe (1914–1945), SOE agent executed by the Nazis
  • Odette Sansom (1912–1995), SOE operative: George Cross, MBE, Legion of Honor
  • Suzanne Spaak, Belgian-born agent: "Red Orchestra" intelligence network; executed 1944
  • Violette Szabo (1921–1945), SOE operative: George Cross, Croix de guerre
  • Jean-Pierre Wimille (1908–1949), SOE operative, champion race car driver
  • See also French Resistance

Scientists[]

Social activists[]

  • Hubertine Auclert, journalist and feminist leader
  • Simone de Beauvoir, author, philosopher, and feminist
  • Christian de Boisredon, social activist
  • Sophie de Condorcet, feminist
  • Maria Deraismes, feminist
  • Marguerite Durand, journalist and feminist leader
  • Olympe de Gouges, feminist
  • Samir Kassir, journalist
  • Jean Théophile Victor Leclerc, radical revolutionist, newspaper publisher
  • Félix Pécaut, education proponent and pastor
  • Victor Schœlcher, abolitionist
  • Pierre Seel, homosexual concentration camp survivor, activist, author
  • Séverine, feminist
  • Madeleine Tribolati (1905–1995), trade unionist
  • Flora Tristan, feminist

Soldiers[]

Theologians[]

O.P. (Ordo Praedicatorum) is the abbreviation used to indicate that someone is/was a member of the Dominican order, a Catholic religious order. S.J. (Societas Iesu) is the abbreviation used to indicate that someone is/was a member of the Society of Jesus, another Catholic religious order.

  • Marie-Émile Boismard O.P.
  • Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet
  • Jean Calvin
  • Sebastian Castellio, translator of the Bible
  • Pierre Cauchon, condemned Joan of Arc
  • Robert Ciboule, Roman Catholic theologian
  • Bernard of Clairvaux
  • Jean Claude
  • Yves Congar, O.P.
  • Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, O.P.
  • Hubert Languet
  • Maurice Leenhardt, ethnologist, theologian
  • Jean Louail, theologian
  • François Picquet, 18th-century missionary in New France
  • Alexander de Rhodes S.J., 17th-century missionary to Indochina
  • Auguste Sabatier
  • Antonin Sertillanges O.P., founder of the Revue Thomiste
  • Pierre Teilhard de Chardin S.J.
  • Simon-Michel Treuvé

Others[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Smith, Beverley; Diamond, Dan (1997). A Year in Figure Skating. McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 0-7710-2755-9. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
  2. ^ Spunder, Or (24 January 2008). הקשר ג'ונתן אסוס מועמד למכבי ת"א (in Hebrew). One.co.il. Retrieved 28 January 2008. קשרה היהודי/צרפתי של ראים מהליגה ה-2 בצרפת עשוי להגיע להתרשמות במכבי.
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ דיווחים בצרפת: מכבי ת"א מעוניינת ברודי חדד (in Hebrew). One.co.il. 7 July 2007. Retrieved 7 July 2007. האם הקשר היהודי, רודי חדד, בדרך למכבי תל-אביב?
  5. ^ "Simon Pagenaud becomes the first French driver to win Indianapolis 500 in more than a century". www.amp.cnn.com. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  6. ^ "The beginning – The history of Renault". www.group.renault.com. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  7. ^ "Meet Miss France 2016". www.france24.com. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
  8. ^ "Miss France beats Hati and Colombia to clinch Miss Universe title". www.cnn.com. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
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