- male, deceased (656)
- Grimoald I (616-656), called the Elder (in French, "Grimaud") was the Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia from 643 to 656. He was the son of Pepin of...
- female, deceased (1944)
- Andrée Raymonde Borrel was a French heroine of World War II. Andrée Borrel was born into a working-class family at Natzwiller, Bas-Rhin, in the su...
- male, deceased (652)
- Saint Emmeram of Regensburg (also "Emmeramus", "Emmeran", "Emeran", "Heimrammi", "Haimeran", or "Heimeran") was born in Poitiers and was a...
- male, deceased (1608)
- Jean Vauquelin de la Fresnaye was a French poet born at the château of La Fresnaye, near Falaise in Normandy, in 1536. He studied the humanities a...
- male, deceased (1671)
- Antonio Barberini (1607 or 1608 - August 3 1671) was an Italian cardinal. Born in Rome, he was named cardinal by his uncle Urban VIII of february 7...
- male, deceased (1613)
- Adam Blackwood (born Dunfermline, Scotland 1539 and died 1613 in Poitiers, France) was a Scottish author and apologist for Mary Queen of Scots.
- male, deceased (1188)
- Richard of Ilchester, also called Richard of Toclyve, Richard of Toclive, English statesman and prelate, was born in the diocese of Bath, where he...
- male, deceased (1422)
- Simon de Cramaud was a Catholic bishop, patriarch, and cardinal during the Great Western Schism of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Simon...
- male
- Gundoald, Gundowald, Gundovald, or Gondovald (in French, "Gombaud") was a usurper king of Aquitaine in either 584 or 585. He claimed to be an...
- male, deceased (346)
- Saint Maximin (born at Silly near Poitiers; — Poitiers 12 September 346) was the fifth bishop of Trier, according to the list provided by the di...
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