Skip to content
Category

French anarchists

page 1
Albert Camus
French philosopher, author, and journalist (1913–1960)
Octave Mirbeau
French writer, art critic and journalist (1848–1917)
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
French politician, philosopher, anarchist and socialist (1809-1865)
Simone Weil
French philosopher, writer, and social activist (1909–1943)
André Breton
French writer and poet, co-founder of Surrealism (1896–1966)
Louis Althusser
French Marxist philosopher (1918–1990)
Louise Michel
French author and anarchist (1830-1905)
Paul Signac
French painter (1863–1935)
Alejandro Jodorowsky
Chilean-French filmmaker and comics writer
Georges Brassens
French singer-songwriter and poet (1921–1981)
Élisée Reclus
French geographer and writer (1830–1905)
Q123740
Swiss painter and printmaker (1865-1925)
Alexandra David-Néel
French explorer, spiritualist, Buddhist, Taoist, anarchist and writer
Michel Onfray
French philosopher
Jean Vigo
French film director (1905–1934)
Tristan Bernard
French playwright (1866–1947)
Jules Vallès
French journalist and author (1832-1885)
Léo Ferré
French-born Monégasque poet and singer
Jacques Ellul
French sociologist, technology critic, and Christian anarchist
Célestin Freinet
French pedagogue
Henri-Edmond Cross
French Neo-Impressionist painter (1856-1910)
Paul Virilio
French philosopher (1932–2018)
Françoise d'Eaubonne
French feminist (1920–2005)
Théophile Steinlen
painter (1859-1923)
Séverine
French anarchist, journalist and feminist (1855–1929)
Paul Adam
French novelist (1862–1920)
Maximilien Luce
French painter (1858-1941)
Ravachol
François Claudius Ravachol (; born Koenigstein; 14 October 1859 – 11 July 1892), also known as the Christ of Anarchy, was a French illegalist anarchist mainly known for his terrorist activism, impact, the myths that developed around his figure, and his influence on the anarchist movement, French society and art. He is also credited as being one of the main launchers of the Ère des attentats (1892-1894).
Madeleine Pelletier
French physician, psychiatrist, feminist, socialist, editor (1874-1939)
Félix Fénéon
French anarchist and art critic (1861-1944)
Léon Werth
French writer (1878–1955)
Théodore Monod
French naturalist and explorer (1902-2000)
Sébastien Faure
French anarchist (1858–1942)
Daniel Guérin
French anarcho-communist author (1904-1988)
Henri Laborit
French physician, writer and philosopher (1914-1995)
Pierre Clastres
French anthropologist (1934-1977)
Émile Henry
sentenced to death in France
Marius Jacob
French anarchist (1879–1954)
Auguste Vaillant
sentenced to death in France
Eugène Lanti
Esperantist, socialist and writer (1879-1947)
Jean Grave
French anarchist (1854–1939)
Han Ryner
French individualist anarchist philosopher, activist, and novelist (1861-1938)
Michel Zevaco
French writer (1860–1918)
Georges Darien
French author, 19th & 20th centuries (1862–1921)
Joseph Déjacque
French writer (1821–1864)
Ernest Labrousse
French historian (1895–1988)
Clément Duval
French anarchist, founder of illegalism (1850–1935)
Armand Gatti
French writer and filmmaker (1924–2017)
Charles Angrand
French painter (1854-1926)
Paul Robin
French anarchist pedagogue
Anselme Bellegarrigue
French anarchist (1813–1890)
Nelly Roussel
French activist (1878–1922)
Paul Brousse
French socialist (1844-1912)
E. Armand
French individualist anarchist (1872-1962)
Siné
Maurice Albert Sinet (; 31 December 1928 – 5 May 2016), known professionally as Siné (), was a French political cartoonist. His work is noted for its anti-capitalism, anti-clericalism, anti-colonialism, antisemitism, and anarchism. thumb|Drawings in a photo by Paolo Monti (1960)
Bernard Lazare
French Jewish literary critic, political journalist, polemicist, and anarchist (1865-1903)
Émile Pouget
French anarchist
Peste Noire
French black metal band
Eugène Varlin
French socialist (1839-1871)
Charles-Ange Laisant
French mathematician and politician (1841-1920)