List of Famous people with last name Lefebvre
Jean Lefebvre
Jean Marcel Lefebvre was a French film actor.
Philippe Lefebvre
Philippe Lefebvre is a French actor and screenwriter. He performed in more than fifty films since 1981.
Frédéric Lefebvre
Frédéric Lefebvre is a French politician who served as Secretary of State for Trade, Small and Medium Enterprises, Tourism, Services, Liberal professions and Consumption under the Minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, François Baroin, in the government of Prime Minister François Fillon. From 2008 to 2009 and from 2013 until 2017, he was a member of the National Assembly, representing the Hauts-de-Seine department. He is also the founder of l'Ame Nord, a non-profit organization dedicated to serve the interests of French residents living in the US and Canada.
André Lefèbvre
André Lefebvre was a French automobile engineer.
François Joseph Lefebvre
François Joseph Lefebvre, Duc de Dantzig, was a French military commander during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars and one of the original eighteen Marshals of the Empire created by Napoleon.
Louise-Rosalie Lefebvre
Louise-Rosalie Lefebvre, also known as Madame Dugazon, was a French operatic mezzo-soprano, actress and dancer.
Stéphane Lefebvre
Stéphane Lefebvre is a rally driver from France.
Claude Lefebvre
Claude Ulysse Lefebvre was a Canadian municipal politician, who served as mayor of the city of Laval, Quebec, Canada from 1981 to 1989.
Philippe Lefebvre
Philippe Lefebvre is a French filmmaker.
Marcel Lefebvre
Marcel François Marie Joseph Lefebvre was a French Roman Catholic archbishop. In 1970, he founded the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) as a small community of seminarians in the village of Écône, Switzerland, with the permission of Bishop François Charrière of Fribourg. In 1975, after a flare of tensions with the Holy See, Lefebvre was ordered to disband the society, but ignored the decision. In 1988, against the expressed prohibition of Pope John Paul II, he consecrated four bishops to continue his work with the SSPX. The Holy See immediately declared that he and the other bishops who had participated in the ceremony had incurred automatic excommunication under Catholic canon law, a status Lefebvre refused to acknowledge to his death three years later.